Covering Crawley and the wider West Sussex, Surrey and South East region. Our local surveyors serve over 30 towns and villages across Sussex and beyond.
As a trusted local surveying practice, we know the Crawley area and the surrounding region inside out. From the clay soils of Mid Sussex that create subsidence risk, to the Victorian housing stock of Brighton and the newer developments near Gatwick Airport — local knowledge makes a real difference to the quality of your survey.
Our surveyors regularly cover the whole of West Sussex, large parts of Surrey, East Sussex and extend into Kent and Hampshire for the right instruction. If you're based in London and the South and looking for property in the Crawley area, we can help.
Based on our last 500 completed surveys across the region.
Crawley is our home base and the area we know best. The Crawley property market is diverse — from post-war prefabs in Langley Green to newer executive homes in Maidenbower and Pound Hill, and the Victorian terraces of Three Bridges. Each neighbourhood has its own characteristics and common property defects.
One challenge unique to the Crawley area is proximity to Gatwick Airport. Aircraft noise affects property values in some postcode areas and can complicate both valuations and mortgage lending. Our surveyors are well-versed in these local factors.
We cover all of Crawley including: Bewbush, Broadfield, Furnace Green, Gossops Green, Ifield, Langley Green, Maidenbower, Northgate, Pound Hill, Southgate, Tilgate, Three Bridges and West Green.
Book a Crawley SurveyNot sure if we cover your area? Get in touch — we're flexible and happy to travel for the right instruction.
The clay soils across much of West Sussex shrink in dry summers and swell after rain — creating real subsidence risk. We know which postcodes carry the highest risk and inspect accordingly.
Properties in the Crawley area and Horley near Gatwick Airport are affected by noise. This influences valuations, insurance and mortgage terms. We factor this in accurately for every relevant property.
Crawley was one of the UK's original New Towns, meaning a large proportion of its housing stock uses post-war construction techniques — Airey houses, BISF steel frame, Wimpey no-fines and others — each with specific defects our surveyors know well.