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How Long Does It Take to Buy a New Build Home? Timelines for Every Stage, What Causes Delays, Off-Plan vs Ready-to-Move Schedules, and How to Speed Up the Slowest Parts

How Long Does It Take to Buy a New Build Home? Timelines for Every Stage, What Causes Delays, Off-Plan vs Ready-to-Move Schedules, and How to Speed Up the Slowest Parts
Free PDF available for this topicDownload Buying Timeline Guide

Timeline Overview: The Three Scenarios

The total time from first visit to moving in varies dramatically depending on the type of purchase.

ScenarioTotal TimelineKey Variable
Completed property (ready to move in)6-12 weeksHow quickly your mortgage and legal work complete
Under construction (part-built when you reserve)3-9 monthsConstruction progress and completion date accuracy
Off-plan (not yet started or early-stage build)9-30+ monthsConstruction timeline — can extend significantly with delays

Why New Build Timelines Differ from Resale

On a standard resale purchase, the timeline is driven by the chain — how many buyers and sellers need to synchronise. On a new build, there's no chain (you're buying from the developer), but the timeline is driven by construction progress and the developer's internal deadlines. The legal and financial work runs in parallel with the build, not sequentially.

Pre-Reservation: Research and Preparation (2-12 Weeks)

The time you invest before reserving directly affects how smoothly everything runs afterwards.

TaskTypical DurationCan You Start Before Visiting?
Online research — developments, areas, prices1-4 weeksYes — this is your starting point
Decision in Principle (DIP) from lender/broker24-48 hours once appliedYes — and you should. Essential before reserving
Deposit confirmation — savings accessible, gifted deposit letter arranged1-2 weeksYes — verify funds are ready and have a clear paper trail
Solicitor research and appointment3-7 daysYes — get quotes and shortlist before you visit the sales centre
Visiting developments and show homes2-6 weeks (multiple visits)N/A
Area research — transport, schools, amenities, flooding1-2 weeksYes — use the Environment Agency flood map, Ofsted, and local council planning portal

How to Use This Time Well

The buyers who have the smoothest purchases are the ones who arrive at the sales centre with a DIP, a solicitor on standby, and accessible funds. This means when you decide to reserve, you can move immediately — and the 28-day clock to exchange starts with everything already in motion.

For what to ask during visits, see our 100+ questions to ask guide.

Reservation to Exchange (4-8 Weeks)

This is the most time-critical phase. The developer typically expects exchange within 28 days of reservation (though extensions to 42 or 56 days are sometimes possible).

What Happens and How Long Each Part Takes

TaskWho Does ItTypical DurationRuns in Parallel With
Reservation agreement signed, fee paidYou + developerDay 1
Instruct solicitorYouDay 1-2
Developer's solicitor sends contract pack to your solicitorDeveloper's solicitor3-10 days after reservationMortgage application
Full mortgage application submittedYou + brokerDays 1-5Legal work
Mortgage valuation arranged and completedLender5-15 days from applicationLegal work
Mortgage offer issuedLender2-4 weeks from applicationLegal work
Solicitor reviews contract pack and raises enquiriesYour solicitor5-14 days from receipt of packMortgage application
Developer's solicitor responds to enquiriesDeveloper's solicitor5-14 daysMortgage valuation
Solicitor reviews search resultsYour solicitorSearches take 5-20 days depending on local authorityContract review
Solicitor reports to you and you sign contractYour solicitor + you2-5 days
Exchange of contractsBoth solicitors1 day

The Critical Path

The three potential bottlenecks that determine your exchange timeline are:

  1. Mortgage offer — typically 2-4 weeks from application. This can't happen until your full application is submitted with all documents
  2. Legal searches — typically 5-20 days depending on the local authority. Some councils take 4-6 weeks during busy periods
  3. Contract pack and enquiries — depends on the developer's solicitor's responsiveness and the complexity of the legal pack

If all three run in parallel and there are no complications, exchange can happen in 4 weeks. If any bottleneck causes delay, expect 6-8 weeks.

For details on what happens during these 28 days, see our critical 28 days after reservation guide.

Exchange to Completion

The gap between exchange and completion depends entirely on the state of the property.

Timeline by Property Status

Property Status at ExchangeTypical Gap to CompletionRisk of Delay
Completed and ready to occupy1-4 weeks (often simultaneous exchange and completion)Low — property exists, only legal formalities remain
Nearly complete (internal finishes stage)4-12 weeksMedium — weather, supply chain issues, or labour shortages can extend
Under construction (superstructure complete)3-6 monthsMedium-High — multiple stages still to complete
Early construction (foundations/substructure)6-12 monthsHigh — many variables can cause delay
Pre-construction (off-plan, not yet started)12-30+ monthsVery high — planning conditions, site preparation, full build programme

What Happens During This Period

Between exchange and completion, you're waiting for the developer to finish the build. During this time:

  • Monitor your mortgage offer expiry — standard offers last 6 months from issue date. If completion won't happen before expiry, contact your broker at least 6 weeks before to arrange an extension or new application
  • Track construction progress — request updates from the developer. Some allow site visits at key stages
  • Arrange insurance — buildings insurance should start from the completion date
  • Plan your move — book removals, redirect post, arrange utility connections
  • Save for furnishing — new builds come empty. No curtain poles, no shelving, no garden landscaping

The Notice Period

Once the developer confirms the property is ready, they typically give 10-14 days' written notice of the completion date. Your solicitor uses this time to:

  • Request the mortgage funds from your lender (usually 5 working days)
  • Prepare the completion statement
  • Confirm all legal requirements are met
  • Arrange the transfer of funds

Completion to Settled (1-6 Months)

Getting the keys is just the start. Settling into a new build takes time.

TaskWhenDuration
Home demonstration by developerCompletion day30-60 minutes
Meter readings and utility registrationCompletion day30 minutes
Snagging inspectionFirst 1-7 days (ideally before moving furniture in)2-4 hours
Report snagging list to developerWithin first 2 weeks1-2 hours to compile and submit
Snagging fixes by developer2-8 weeks (some items take longer)Multiple visits typically needed
Land Registry confirmation4-12 weeks after completionHandled by your solicitor
Stamp duty paymentWithin 14 days of completionHandled by your solicitor
Building drying out periodFirst 9-12 monthsOngoing — affects decoration, doors, cracks
Garden establishmentFirst 6-12 monthsTurf takes 6+ months to establish properly
Infrastructure completion (if early phase)6-24+ monthsRoads adopted, play areas finished, landscaping completed

For detailed completion day advice, see our hour-by-hour completion guide. For snagging, see our 200+ item snagging checklist.

Managing Parallel Workstreams

The fastest new build purchases happen when multiple tasks run simultaneously rather than sequentially.

What Can Run in Parallel

Workstream AWorkstream B (Running Simultaneously)Time Saved vs Sequential
Mortgage application and valuationSolicitor reviewing contract pack and ordering searches2-3 weeks
Waiting for search resultsSolicitor raising and resolving enquiries with developer's solicitor1-2 weeks
Mortgage underwritingSolicitor finalising contract review1-2 weeks
Waiting for construction (post-exchange)Arranging insurance, planning move, furnishing researchN/A (but reduces post-completion stress)

What Must Happen Sequentially

  • Reservation → then instruct solicitor and submit mortgage application
  • Mortgage valuation → then mortgage offer (the offer can't be issued until the valuation is satisfactory)
  • All legal work complete + mortgage offer received → then exchange can happen
  • Exchange → then completion (you can't complete without having exchanged)
  • Completion → then Land Registry registration and stamp duty payment

The Ideal Timeline

If everything runs perfectly in parallel:

  • Week 1: Reserve. Instruct solicitor. Submit full mortgage application with all documents.
  • Week 1-2: Developer's solicitor sends contract pack. Your solicitor starts review. Mortgage valuation booked.
  • Week 2-3: Valuation completed. Searches ordered. Solicitor raises enquiries.
  • Week 3-4: Mortgage offer issued. Enquiry responses received. Search results back.
  • Week 4: Solicitor reports to you. You sign contract. Exchange.

This perfect scenario is achievable but requires preparation, responsive professionals, and no complications.

What Causes Delays at Every Stage

Pre-Exchange Delays

DelayTypical ImpactHow CommonPrevention
Slow mortgage application (missing documents)1-3 weeksVery commonPrepare all documents before reserving: payslips, bank statements, ID, address proof, SA302 if self-employed
Down-valuation2-6 weeksCommon (15-25% of new builds)Discuss contingencies with broker before applying. See mortgage problems guide
Slow local authority searches1-4 weeks beyond normalVaries by areaAsk solicitor to order searches on day 1. Consider personal searches if available
Developer's solicitor slow to respond to enquiries1-3 weeksCommonYour solicitor should chase proactively. Escalate through your sales adviser if needed
Contract pack not sent promptly1-2 weeksOccasionalConfirm with sales adviser that the pack will be sent within 3 days of reservation
Gifted deposit issues (anti-money-laundering checks)1-3 weeksCommon when parents helpGet the gifted deposit letter and proof of funds ready before reserving
Credit issues discovered during full application2-6+ weeksOccasionalCheck your credit file with all three agencies before applying. Fix any errors

Construction Delays (Post-Exchange, Off-Plan)

Delay CauseTypical ImpactHow Common
Weather (heavy rain, extreme cold, high winds)2-8 weeksVery common — UK weather is unpredictable
Material supply shortages2-12 weeksPeriodic — varies by material and global supply chains
Labour shortages (bricklayers, electricians, plumbers)2-8 weeksCommon — skilled trade shortages are ongoing
Planning condition discharge4-12 weeksOccasional — some conditions take months to satisfy
Utility connections (gas, electric, water, broadband)4-16 weeksCommon — utility companies work to their own schedules
Building control issues2-8 weeksOccasional — if inspections fail and remedial work is needed
Developer financial difficultiesIndefiniteRare
Ground conditions (unexpected contamination, archaeological finds)4-26 weeksRare

Post-Completion Delays

DelayTypical ImpactHow Common
Snagging fixes taking months2-6 months for full resolutionVery common
Road and sewer adoption1-5+ years after development completesVery common — council adoption is slow
Communal areas not finished (Phase 1 of multi-phase development)1-3+ yearsCommon
Land Registry registration4-12 weeksAlways — this is standard processing time

How to Speed Up Every Stage

Before Reservation

ActionTime SavedEffort Required
Get a DIP before visiting any development1-2 weeksLow — 30-minute online application
Shortlist 2-3 solicitors and get quotes3-7 daysLow — email or phone
Organise all mortgage documents in advance (payslips, bank statements, ID, P60, SA302)1-2 weeksMedium — gathering paperwork
Check your credit file and fix any errorsPrevents 2-6 week delaysLow — free checks via Experian/Equifax/TransUnion
Arrange gifted deposit letter and donor's proof of funds1-3 weeksLow-Medium
Research the development thoroughly before first visit1-2 weeks of deliberationLow

Reservation to Exchange

ActionTime SavedEffort Required
Instruct solicitor on the same day you reserve3-7 daysAlready have one shortlisted
Submit full mortgage application within 48 hours of reserving1 weekHave documents ready
Ask solicitor to order searches immediately (don't wait for contract pack)1-2 weeksOne phone call
Respond to solicitor/broker requests within 24 hoursCumulative 1-2 weeksKeep your phone on and check emails daily
Chase developer's solicitor if contract pack isn't sent within 5 daysPrevents 1-2 week delayOne phone call to your sales adviser
Sign and return all documents promptly (don't sit on paperwork)Cumulative 3-7 daysLow — just prioritise it

Exchange to Completion

ActionTime SavedEffort Required
Monitor mortgage offer expiry and request extension 6 weeks before it lapsesPrevents 3-6 week delay (reapplication)One call to broker
Arrange buildings insurance in advance (don't wait for completion notice)Prevents last-minute scramble1 hour comparing quotes
Book removals as soon as you have an estimated completion datePrevents 1-2 week delay getting a slotOne hour
Register with utility providers earlyPrevents post-completion hassle30 minutes

Critical Dates and Deadlines

Missing these deadlines can cost you money or cause your purchase to fall through.

DeadlineWhat Happens If You Miss ItHow to Avoid
Reservation period (28 days)Developer can release the property. Reservation fee may be non-refundableMove immediately: instruct solicitor, submit mortgage application, chase all parties
Mortgage offer validity (6 months)Offer expires. You need to reapply — with fresh credit checks, income verification, and potentially different ratesTrack expiry date. Request extension 6 weeks before. See mortgage problems guide
Search results validity (3-6 months)Your solicitor may need to re-order searches at additional costTime searches to align with realistic completion timeline
Stamp duty payment (14 days after completion)Interest and penalties from HMRC. Your solicitor handles this but you pay the billEnsure funds are with your solicitor before completion. Your solicitor should submit on your behalf
Longstop dateIf the developer misses this, you can withdraw with deposit returned. But if YOU miss notice deadlines, you may lose this rightKnow your longstop date. Mark it in your calendar. Discuss with solicitor well before it arrives
Notice to complete (10 working days)If you can't complete within the notice period, the developer can rescind the contract and keep your depositEnsure funds and legal work are ready before the developer serves notice
Defects reporting (2 years from completion)After the defects liability period, the developer is no longer obligated to fix non-structural issuesReport ALL defects during year 1-2. Keep written records

Off-Plan Buying: Extended Timeline

Buying off-plan adds significant time and complexity to the process.

Typical Off-Plan Timeline

PhaseDurationWhat's HappeningWhat You're Doing
Pre-reservation research2-8 weeksDevelopment marketing begins. Show home or marketing suite openVisiting, comparing, deciding
Reservation to exchange4-8 weeksDeveloper begins or continues constructionMortgage DIP → full application. Solicitor reviews contract. Searches ordered
Exchange to construction milestones6-24 monthsFoundations → superstructure → first fix → second fix → finishesMonitoring, extending mortgage if needed, planning furnishing
Developer notice of completion10-14 daysProperty passes final inspectionsSolicitor draws down mortgage. Final funds arranged
Completion1 dayKeys handed overMoving in

The Mortgage Challenge

The biggest timing challenge with off-plan purchases is the mortgage. Most offers last 6 months. If your property won't complete for 18 months, your strategy options are:

  • Apply late — wait until the property is 4-5 months from completion, then apply. Risk: if completion is delayed further, you may still need an extension
  • Apply early and extend — apply at reservation, get the offer, then request an extension nearer completion. Most lenders allow one extension of 3-6 months
  • Specialist off-plan products — some lenders offer extended validity offers (9-12 months) specifically for off-plan purchases

Your broker should advise on the best strategy for your specific timeline. See our off-plan mortgage timelines guide.

The Developer's Timeline (What They Don't Tell You)

Understanding the developer's internal priorities helps you predict delays and negotiate better.

The Developer's Financial Calendar

PeriodDeveloper BehaviourWhat It Means for You
Financial year end (June or December for most listed builders)Developers push hard to complete homes before year-end to recognise revenue in that financial yearIf your home is near completion at year-end, the developer will prioritise finishing it. But quality may be compromised by the rush
Financial half-year endSimilar revenue recognition pressure, but less intenseSame as above, to a lesser degree
Slow sales period (typically January-February)Developers may offer enhanced incentives to maintain sales momentumBetter negotiating position. More choice of plots. Sales advisers more willing to be flexible on terms
Strong sales period (March-June, September-October)Less incentive to negotiate. Higher demandFewer incentives. Less choice. More pressure to decide quickly
Phase launchesNew plots released, often with introductory incentivesBest prices often available on launch day. But properties are furthest from completion

Why Estimated Completion Dates Move

Developers provide estimated completion dates, but these are informed guesses, not promises. They move because:

  • Developers under-promise build time to the Board but sales teams give optimistic dates to encourage reservations
  • Build programmes are sequential — a delay in one plot ripples to others on the site
  • External factors are unpredictable — weather, supply chain, utility connections, building control
  • The contractual protection is the longstop date — the estimated completion date has no legal weight

As a rule of thumb, add 20-30% to any estimated completion timeline the developer gives you.

Week-by-Week Buying Calendar (Completed Property)

This is the fastest realistic timeline for buying a completed, ready-to-occupy new build home.

WeekWhat's HappeningYour Action Items
Week 0 (before reserving)Research, visits, DIP obtained, solicitor shortlistedVisit developments. Compare plots. Get DIP. Choose solicitor
Week 1Reservation. Contract pack sent. Mortgage application submittedPay reservation fee. Instruct solicitor immediately. Submit full mortgage application with all documents
Week 2Solicitor starts reviewing contract. Valuation booked. Searches orderedRespond promptly to any broker/solicitor requests. Chase contract pack if not yet received
Week 3Valuation completed. Solicitor raises enquiries. Searches processingProvide any additional documents requested. Review solicitor's initial report
Week 4Mortgage offer issued. Enquiry responses received. Search results backReview mortgage offer. Discuss any solicitor concerns
Week 5Solicitor's final report to you. Sign contractsRead the report carefully. Sign and return contracts. Transfer exchange deposit to solicitor
Week 6Exchange of contractsCompletion date agreed (may be same day or within 2 weeks for completed property)
Week 6-8CompletionSolicitor transfers funds. Collect keys. Meter readings. Home demonstration. Snagging inspection

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to buy a new build from start to finish?

For a completed property: 6-12 weeks from reservation to keys. For off-plan: 6-30+ months depending on the build stage when you reserve. The most common scenario is 3-6 months for a property that's under construction when you reserve.

Can I speed up the process?

Yes. The biggest time savings come from preparation: having a DIP, pre-selected solicitor, organised documents, and accessible deposit before you reserve. During the process, respond to all requests within 24 hours and chase any party that goes quiet for more than a few days.

What happens if my mortgage offer expires before completion?

You'll need either an extension (most lenders allow one, for 3-6 months) or a fresh application. A fresh application means new credit checks, income verification, and potentially different interest rates. Contact your broker at least 6 weeks before expiry. See our mortgage problems guide.

How long do local authority searches take?

Typically 5-20 working days, but it varies enormously by council. Some inner London boroughs and busy rural councils can take 4-6 weeks. Your solicitor will know the typical turnaround for the relevant local authority. Personal searches (done by a search agent directly at the council offices) are sometimes faster but not all lenders accept them.

How accurate are developer completion dates?

Developer estimated completion dates are indicative, not binding. As a rule of thumb, add 20-30% to any estimate. The only legally meaningful date is the longstop date in the contract. If the developer gives you a "Q3 2026" estimate, plan for Q4 2026 to be safe.

Can the developer change the completion date after exchange?

The estimated completion date can move. The developer must complete by the longstop date (the maximum deadline set in the contract). If they miss the longstop date, you can withdraw and recover your deposit. See our contract guide.

How long does snagging take to resolve?

The inspection itself takes 2-4 hours. Submitting the report: 1-2 days. The developer's first round of fixes: 2-6 weeks. Full resolution of all items: 2-6 months (some complex items take longer). Keep records and chase regularly.

What is the fastest possible new build purchase?

The absolute fastest is a simultaneous exchange and completion on a completed property with a cash buyer (no mortgage) — potentially achievable in 2-3 weeks. With a mortgage on a completed property, 4-5 weeks is possible if everything runs perfectly. These are exceptional cases, not the norm.

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