01134 035 336
sell@propertysaviour.co.uk
5 Star Rated. Trusted By Sellers Like You.

Can You Sell A House With Damp and Mould?

📝 TL;DR

You can sell a house with damp and mould without fixing it first. The trick is knowing your legal options and who to trust because damp terrifies buyers, potentially stripping massive value off your property, but it doesn't have to leave you stuck.

Yes, you can. And you do not need to fix it first. Here is everything you need to know — including the fastest, cleanest way out.

Damp is one of the most dreaded words in British property — and the numbers explain why. According to the English Housing Survey 2024–25, published by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, 1.4 million homes in England now have a problem with damp. That is 5 per cent of the entire housing stock — and it is rising. Since 2019, cases of rising damp have increased by 50 per cent, penetrating damp has doubled, and serious condensation and mould have grown by a third. A separate government report estimates that up to 6.5 million UK households could be affected when broader moisture and mould issues are included. Yet despite the sheer scale of the problem, 75 per cent of buyers walk away the moment damp is mentioned — and in serious cases, damp can strip up to 10 per cent off a property’s value, with structural damage pushing reductions as high as 50 per cent.

It stops buyers cold. It triggers surveyors. It collapses mortgage offers. And it leaves sellers stuck — sometimes for months, sometimes for years.

But here is the truth most estate agents will not tell you upfront. You can sell a house with damp, exactly as it is, without spending a single penny on repairs. The key is knowing which route to take — and who to trust.

This guide is written from a seller’s perspective. It covers your legal position, your realistic options, and the hidden costs that erode far more value than most people ever realise.

Source notes for journalists and editors:

  • English Housing Survey 2024–25: Headline Findings on Housing Quality and Energy Efficiency — Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG), published January 2026
  • Understanding and Addressing the Health Risks of Damp and Mould in the Home — MHCLG, August 2024 (6.5 million household estimate)
  • 75% buyer withdrawal figure — widely cited across property industry research including BetterMove and industry surveys

What Is Damp — And Why Does It Terrify Buyers?

Damp is moisture that has entered your property and refuses to leave.

It shows itself in several ways. Stained walls. Peeling wallpaper. A persistent musty smell. Black patches creeping across bathroom ceilings. Soft or crumbling plaster near skirting boards. Each type has a different cause, a different cost — and a very different effect on your sale.

There are four main types you will encounter:

  • Penetrating damp — water forcing its way through external walls, usually due to defective pointing, missing roof tiles, or faulty guttering
  • Condensation — the most common type, caused by poor ventilation; responsible for most surface mould in kitchens and bathrooms
  • Rising damp — groundwater creeping upwards through walls; typically affects older properties where the damp-proof course has failed or was never installed
  • Lateral damp — water entering horizontally, often through basement or retaining walls

Buyers panic at all of them. But rising damp, in particular, sends most of them running for the door.

Rising Damp: The One That Worries Everyone Most

Rising damp is slow relentless and expensive to fix — and its symptoms are hard to miss once you know what to look for.

Look for a tide mark on lower walls, usually between one and one and a half metres from the floor. The plaster may feel soft or powdery. Salts may be crystallising on the surface. Skirting boards rot. Paint blisters. And the smell — that distinctive, earthy, cold-cellar smell — lingers long after you open the windows.

Treating rising damp typically costs between £1,000 and £5,000, depending on the extent of the damage. But buyers never take your word for the cost. They bring in their own surveyors, who frequently overestimate the work involved. That inflated quote becomes their justification for chipping your asking price.

And here is what makes it worse. If you decide to sell a house with damp through the open market, rising damp can cause a mortgage lender to refuse to lend entirely. No mortgage means no buyer — unless that buyer is paying cash.

house full of damp on the walls with a dehumidifier plugged in

Can You Also Sell a House With Mould?

This is one of the most common questions sellers ask — and the answer is yes.

Mould and damp often go hand in hand. Mould is the fungal growth that appears when moisture lingers too long. It can be surface-level, wiped away with a diluted bleach solution. Or it can be structural, growing deep into plaster and timber, requiring professional remediation.

To sell a house with mould through the traditional market, you will face the same obstacles as with damp: nervous buyers, wary lenders, and surveyors who flag every spot in their report. Over 60 per cent of UK homeowners have reported mould in their properties, yet even a minor patch can result in a buyer withdrawing their offer or demanding a significant reduction.

Selling to a cash buyer removes that problem entirely. No survey. No mortgage application. No lender second-guessing the condition of your home.

Are You Legally Required to Declare Damp When Selling?

Yes. Absolutely. Without question.

There is no law preventing you from selling a house with damp. But there is a clear legal obligation to disclose it. When you sell, your solicitor will ask you to complete a TA6 Property Information Form. This form specifically asks about damp, and you must answer honestly.

Attempting to hide or paint over damp before a sale is not a clever workaround. It is misrepresentation. Buyers who discover undisclosed damp after completion can pursue you through the courts for compensation — and they frequently win. Courts tend to favour buyers in these disputes.

The safest and most practical position is simple transparency. Disclose what you know, and find the right buyer for the property as it stands.

How Much Does Damp Actually Devalue Your Home?

The figures are sobering.

Surveys suggest that visible damp can reduce a property’s value by up to 10 per cent. In severe cases — where damp has caused structural damage — the reduction can reach 50 per cent or more. On a property worth £250,000, that is a potential loss of £25,000 to £125,000.

Even when sellers choose to fix the damp before listing, they rarely recoup the full cost of repairs. Research indicates that treated properties still see a residual value reduction of around 3 per cent — because the history of damp is on record and buyers remain cautious.

And then there is the time cost. Properties with damp sit on the market for longer. Fewer viewings. More fall-throughs. More renegotiations. More stress.

Should You Fix the Damp Before Selling Your Home?

It depends entirely on your circumstances.

If you have the funds, the time, and access to the property, treating minor condensation-related damp before listing makes sense. A documented repair, backed by a 25-year guarantee from a qualified contractor, reassures buyers and protects your asking price.

But if the damp is serious — rising damp, penetrating damp, or mould affecting multiple rooms — the repair bill can easily reach £3,000 to £15,000, according to RICS estimates. And that is before the drying time, which can take months for thick walls. You might invest heavily and still face a reduced offer when the buyer’s surveyor writes their report.

For many sellers, particularly those in financial difficulty, going through a probate, or simply needing a clean break, spending months and thousands of pounds on repairs simply is not a viable option.

Selling an Inherited Property With Damp — What Are Your Choices?

If you have inherited a house and discovered damp, you are not alone. Older properties — which make up the majority of inherited homes in the UK — are disproportionately affected. The older the building, the more likely its damp-proof course has degraded or was never installed.

To sell an inherited house with damp through the open market, you face the same challenges as any other seller, plus the additional complexity of probate, potential family disagreements and an empty property that continues to dete… accomodate ongoing costs like council tax, utilities and insurance.

Selling an inherited home quickly to a cash buyer removes the uncertainty. You receive a firm, guaranteed offer. You close on a date that suits you. And you avoid the drawn-out stress of keeping a property you do not want — and cannot easily maintain — on the market for months.

If you need to sell inherited property fast and cleanly, a direct cash sale is almost always the most practical option.

Why Selling Through an Estate Agent Can Make Things Harder?

Estate agents are the default choice. But for a property with damp or mould, the traditional route carries significant disadvantages.

  1. Reduced pool of buyers. Around 75 per cent of buyers will walk away when they discover damp. Your agent is marketing to a fraction of the usual audience.
  2. Mortgage complications. Most high street lenders will not approve a mortgage on a property with active damp. That rules out the majority of buyers immediately.
  3. Survey fall-throughs. A buyer’s surveyor will flag every damp-related issue in detail. Buyers panic. Deals collapse — often weeks into the process, after you have already incurred legal costs.
  4. Relentless renegotiation. Buyers who do press ahead will use the survey report to justify a price reduction. They will come back with inflated remediation quotes and expect you to absorb the difference.
  5. Time and carrying costs. The average UK property sale takes four to six months. An empty or damp-affected property sitting unsold continues to cost you money every single month.
  6. Agent fees. You will typically pay between 1.2 per cent and 1.5 per cent plus VAT — even if the sale takes eighteen months and falls through twice along the way.

For a straightforward sale, an estate agent is a reasonable choice. For a damp property, it is frequently the most expensive and exhausting option available.

What About Selling at Auction — Is That a Better Option?

Property auctions are often suggested as an alternative for homes in poor condition.

And in some respects, auctions do attract buyers who are comfortable taking on a project. But auctions come with their own sting in the tail.

You will typically pay an entry fee to list the property, whether it sells or not. The auctioneer’s commission can reach 2.5 per cent of the sale price. You may be asked to provide a legal pack in advance — another cost. And crucially, there is no guarantee of sale. If bidding does not reach your reserve price, your property is withdrawn and you start again.

Even when a property does sell at auction, the winning bid is rarely close to market value. Investors bidding at auction factor in their own repair costs, their profit margin, and the risk of purchasing sight unseen. The result is almost always a price well below what you might achieve through a direct cash sale with a reputable buyer.

Auctions can work. But they are rarely the fastest or the most financially optimal route for sellers who need certainty.

Ready To Sell Without The Hassle?

How do we compare with other methods of sale?
If you are flexible on the price, and need speed and certainty of sale, we are the ones to trust.
Method of sale Value achieved Fees Timeframe Is sale guaranteed?
Estate agents 90–95% 1–5% 3–6 months No – one in three sales collapse
Auctioneers 70–80% 2% plus 2–3 months No – half of properties don’t sell
Property Saviour 70–80% £0 10–28 days Yes – 99% success rate
Get a formal cash offer within 48 hours — no surveys, no delays, no fees.

Why Selling to Property Saviour Is a Faster, Simpler Exit

Property Saviour buys any property in any condition, anywhere in the UK. Damp or dry. Mould or no mould. Inherited. Repossession risk. Structural issues. It does not matter.

Here is what you get:

  • A guaranteed cash offer within 24 hours of your enquiry
  • Completion in as little as 10 days — or at a pace that suits you
  • £1,500 towards your legal fees, paid by us
  • A Price Promise: your offer will not be reduced at the last minute
  • No fault-finding survey. We know what we are buying
  • No pressure, no obligation, and no estate agent commission
  • Full regulation: we are members of The Property Ombudsman (TPO) and registered with the ICO

We do not use the survey as a weapon to chip your price. We make a genuine offer and we honour it.

How Much Will Property Saviour Pay for a Damp Property?

We believe in complete transparency. So here is exactly how our offer is structured.

We buy at approximately 70 per cent of a property’s realistic open-market valuation. That is not a penalty — it reflects the genuine costs involved in taking on a problem property. Here is where that 30 per cent goes:

Cost CategoryApproximate PercentageWhat It Covers
Legal costs2%Conveyancing, searches, solicitor fees
Holding costs3%Insurance, council tax, utilities, cleaning
Stamp Duty Land Tax5%Mandatory government tax on purchase
Eventual resale costs5%Estate agent fees and solicitor costs on re-sale
Gross profit before tax15%Required to sustain a viable buying operation
Total deductions30%
Your share70%Paid in cash, on your timeline

We are not hiding anything. Unlike many so-called cash buyers who quote 85 per cent then find reasons to reduce it, our offer is our offer.

You receive an immediate, certain exit from a property that may otherwise cost you months of stress and thousands in carrying costs.

How Can You Check Whether a Cash House Buyer Is Genuine?

This is an important question — and one every seller should ask before signing anything.

The cash buyer market has its share of operators who promise one price and deliver another. Here is how to protect yourself.

Start at Companies House (gov.uk/get-information-about-a-company). Search the buying company by name. Look at three things. First, check how long the company has been trading — fly-by-night operators rarely survive more than a few years.

Second, look at the company’s filed accounts. A genuine cash buyer will show a healthy balance sheet and a track record of purchases.

Accurate property valuation consultation by Property Saviour, specialising in determining your home's worth. Expert advice to help you understand how much your house is worth today.

Third — and this is the telling one — look at the “charges” registered against the company. A string of charges from multiple lenders suggests the company is borrowing heavily to fund its purchases and is not, in fact, a true cash buyer at all

A legitimate cash house buyer will have clean, transparent filings, a demonstrable trading history, and verifiable regulatory memberships such as TPO. Property Saviour is registered and regulated. Check us on Companies House. We welcome the scrutiny.

Your Quickest Way Out Starts With One Phone Call

If your property has damp, mould, rising damp, or any other condition issue, you do not have to fix it, hide it, or endure a long, uncertain sale.

Property Saviour buy any property, in any condition, anywhere in the UK. We are regulated, transparent, and ready to move at your pace.

Request a callback today. One short conversation is all it takes to receive a no-obligation cash offer within 24 hours. No surveys. No reductions. No drama.

👉 [Request Your Free Callback Now] — and let’s get you moving.

Property Saviour is regulated by The Property Ombudsman (TPO) and registered with the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). We buy any property in any condition across the UK.

Last updated: 14 May 2026

Meet the author

saddat

Saddat bought his first property in 2003. Got hooked instantly. By 2009, he'd seen enough shady property buyers lying to desperate homeowners. So he founded Property Saviour with one mission: tell sellers the truth.

Request a Call Back

More from the blog

Whether you’re facing a tricky sale, navigating probate, or simply looking to sell fast without hassle, you’re in the right place. Our blog is packed with practical advice, expert insights, and real-life tips to help homeowners, landlords, and executors across England, Scotland and Wales make informed decisions — whatever the condition of their property.

Person in kitchen reviewing property listings on laptop, surrounded by paperwork, considering Property Saviour's offer.

Thinking of Selling Your Buy to Let Property?

📝 TL;DR Mate, if you’re a landlord feeling the pinch, you can sell your buy-to-let property anytime, even with tenants. With rising mortgage rates, harsh tax changes, and stringent EPC r...
Capital Gains Tax notice on desk with paperwork and markers, illustrating tax management and property investment strategies.

Do You Pay Capital Gains Tax on a House Sale?

📝 TL;DR If you’re selling your main home, usually there’s no capital gains tax to worry about. But for landlords, second homeowners, or selling inherited property, you’ll lik...
Aerial view of a suburban neighbourhood with houses, roads, and green spaces, illustrating quick house sale options and property management solutions.

How Quickly Can a House Sale Go Through in the UK?

📝 TL;DR Selling to a cash buyer with no chain can take just 7 days, whereas going through an estate agent drags it out to 5-6 months, thanks to drawn-out conveyancing and potential sale collap...
Stack of £50 banknotes representing quick cash offers for property sales.

Companies That Buy Houses for Cash

📝 TL;DR In a rush to sell your home? Cash-buying companies can be a godsend, but tread carefully as not all are as genuine as they claim. These buyers offer a hassle-free sale for homes in any...
Hand holding a sign with "Buy? Sell? Rent? Keep?" against a bright blue sky, illustrating property options and decision-making.

Can You Sell a Property With a Regulated Lifetime Tenancy?

📝 TL;DR You can sell a property with a regulated lifetime tenancy, but it’s not straightforward. Normal buyers can’t get mortgages, so you’ll need specialist cash buyers like...
Historic commercial property with potential for redevelopment or renovation in a prime location. Suitable for investors or businesses seeking a unique space in a busy commercial district.

Commercial Property Buyers

📝 TL;DR Selling commercial property is a gruelling process, often stretching over a year, plagued by hidden costs and complexities like managing paperwork and dealing with unreliable agents. S...

Disclaimer

📝 TL;DR You’re visiting PropertySaviour.co.uk where we aim to provide up-to-date and helpful information to guide you in selling your house, but remember we’re not financial advise...
Fallen tree with extensive root damage impacting the brick house exterior, highlighting the importance of professional property assessment and repair.

Can You Sell a House With Tree Root Damage?

📝 TL;DR Selling a house with tree root damage is a nightmare because mortgage lenders reject most buyers until you fork out up to £25,000 for repairs and monitoring. Even then, buyers of...
Our official office hours run Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm. But here's the thing—we're not clock-watchers.

We'll ring you back evenings, weekends, even bank holidays. Because your property sale matters more than our strict adherence to business hours. So do expect that call.

Got multiple properties to shift? Drop us a line at sell@propertysaviour.co.uk.

Prefer an actual conversation? Pick up the phone and call us.

0113 403 5336
Get to Know Us
About Us Property Blog Success Stories Contact Us Request a Callback Property Saviour logo displayed in the footer of the website, representing trusted property management and restoration services.
Membership number: ZC093013
The Property Saviour logo featuring a stylised house icon with the company name, representing trusted property management and solutions.
Regulated by: The Property Ombudsman with Membership Number: T13839
Companies House Verification Check: Property Saviour buy properties in name of Collingtree Limited, Thistledown Barn, 204 Holcot Lane, Sywell, Northampton, NN6 0BG.
Copyright 2026: No content is to be copied without authorisation in writing from us. Please refer to our Terms & Conditions for full details.

Rated as 5 Stars On Google

We Will Buy Any Property, FAST...

  • Sellers who need to sell love us
  • Get £1,500 towards your legal fees
  • Speedy sale in 10 days
  • Stress free sale is just a step away
Contact Form

Request a callback