The UK’s conveyancing conundrum explained

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Why is conveyancing so slow in the UK? The average property transaction now takes between 14 and 20 weeks… and that is not taking into account any leasehold transactions with difficult Managing Agents, issues with title or lengthy chains.

This is just not acceptable and it is no wonder that we all collectively shake our heads and wonder how we got to this.

I often think back to when I started in practice – the turnaround time was routinely 12 weeks. Eight weeks to exchange and a fixed four weeks between exchange and completion.

This delay is not merely an inconvenience; it costs the economy an estimated £1.5 billion annually in failed sales and administrative friction. Understanding why this process remains so sluggish – and how it is being modernised -is essential for any homebuyer or seller.

WHY IT’S SO SLOW

The delays in the UK’s ‘chain-dependent’ system often stem from several systemic bottlenecks.

  • The Chain Effect: Most transactions are linked. If one buyer at the bottom of a 10-person chain has a minor mortgage issue, the entire ‘domino effect’ halts every sale above them.
  • Third-Party Backlogs: Conveyancers must wait on external entities. Local authority searches can take weeks or even months depending on the council’s workload. Similarly, the Land Registry currently faces significant backlogs for complex title updates.
  • Manual Processes: Despite modern technology, much of the industry still relies on paper-heavy workflows, physical signatures, and ‘enquiry tennis’ – the back-and-forth questioning between solicitors that can drag on for weeks.
  • Increased Regulation: Stricter Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Building Safety Act requirements have added layers of mandatory due diligence that solicitors cannot legally bypass.
  • Not enough conveyancers to do the job: Covid was a game changer for many industries including the conveyancing industry. Experienced conveyancers in the twilight of their careers found the difficult working conditions to be a step too far and used it as an opportunity to retire gracefully – leaving a lacuna in terms of personnel and experience.
  • Conveyancers with too heavy workloads: Solicitors are not great business people (I know that!). They tend to think that if they are busy then they are profitable and they also don’t like to turn work down. The result of this is that firms take on too much work which means their service levels drop and this is a significant factor in delays in dealing with transactions.
HOW TO SPEED IT UP

While some factors are structural, proactive steps can significantly reduce timelines:

  1. Upfront Information (UFI): The government is currently consulting on reforms to mandate “material information” at the point of listing.
    By preparing a sale-ready pack – including title deeds, management packs for leaseholds, and property information forms – before an offer is even accepted, sellers can save weeks.
  2. Digital Conveyancing: Choosing a firm that uses digital ID verification, electronic signatures, and online portals can reduce transaction times by up to 40%.
  3. Early Instruction: Buyers should secure a Mortgage in Principle and instruct a solicitor before finding a property.
    Sellers should do the same as soon as the “For Sale” sign goes up.
  4. Binding Conditional Contracts: A major proposed reform involves optional binding agreements at the offer stage.
    This would introduce financial penalties for pulling out late, discouraging gazumping and reducing the one-in-three failure rate of UK property deals.
CENTURIES-OLD FRAMEWORK

Ultimately, while the UK’s centuries-old legal framework is slow to change, a shift toward transparency and digitisation is finally under way to bring completion times closer to international standards.

There is a lot of great work being done within the industry to speed up transaction times but the reality is that whilst we are burdened with a process which was created to deal with transactions in the 19th Century then we are continuously going to be tinkering at the edges.

What is needed is the wholesale reform of the home-buying process and that has to be mandated by Government. Lets hope that this Government stays around  long enough to really make a difference to home buying!

Eddie Goldsmith is co-founder of YouConvey

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