Step 01
We focus on what standard surveys cannot see
Homebuyer and valuation reports usually stop at visible condition. A CCTV drain survey checks underground pipework that can carry significant cost and risk.
Pre-purchase drain intelligence
Most homebuyer surveys do not inspect underground pipes. A CCTV drain survey helps you avoid costly surprises after completion.
Built for buyers who want clarity before exchange, not surprise costs after completion.
Before you commit
The goal is simple: reduce uncertainty at the point when your decision still has room to move.
Most buyer surveys do not inspect buried drainage runs
That leaves one of the costliest hidden systems unchecked at the point of purchase.
A focused CCTV survey gives you practical evidence before exchange
You can proceed with more confidence, budget properly, or raise issues while decisions are still live.
A targeted CCTV survey helps uncover drainage issues that may not appear in a standard valuation or homebuyer report.
Start here
Tell us where the property is and where you are in the purchase. We will help you choose the right survey and explain the next step.
What happens next
Tell us the property location and what you want checked.
We review the enquiry and point you to the right survey route.
You receive clear advice on the next decision.
Useful for buyers
Most useful when a property is older, drainage history is unclear, or you want fewer unknowns before exchange.
How the service helps
Step 01
Homebuyer and valuation reports usually stop at visible condition. A CCTV drain survey checks underground pipework that can carry significant cost and risk.
Step 02
The survey highlights defects such as displacement, root ingress, collapses, and recurring blockage points so you can judge likely impact before purchase.
Step 03
With clearer evidence, you can proceed, budget for remedial work, or raise issues before exchange while leverage remains.
Why this matters
Drainage issues rarely announce themselves during a viewing. They sit out of sight, and the buyer typically inherits the consequences once the keys change hands.
Drainage defects can stay invisible until they trigger emergency repairs, damp, foul odours, or insurance complications.
If issues surface after completion, the cost and disruption usually fall to the new owner, not the seller.
A focused survey turns an underground unknown into something you can evaluate, price, and plan around.