Damp Proofing Costs in East Midlands

Damp Proofing Costs in East Midlands

Estimates derived from UK trade benchmark data and regional labour indices, updated May 2026. Methodology →

Damp Proofing in East Midlands often comes in a little under the national midpoint for similar work. Think of this page as the national guide, translated for a slightly leaner regional market.

In East Midlands, costs tend to sit slightly below the UK average for similar work. For the full UK-wide baseline, compare with Damp Proofing Cost UK.

Two ways to take action on damp proofing costs

Pick the path that fits where you are — running early numbers, or pressure-testing a quote you've already got.

Typical East Midlands damp proofing budgets

Three planning tiers for damp proofing in East Midlands, with scope and a representative figure for each. Run your own numbers in the calculator for a tailored range.

Budget

£950

  • Focused essentials
  • Practical finishes
Mid-rangeMost common

£1,950

  • Balanced specification with core upgrades
  • Reliable materials
Premium

£6,300

  • Premium materials
  • Wider scope with higher coordination demands

Typical regional cost ranges

ItemCost Range
DPC injection (per m)£50 – £100
Single wall DPC£400 – £1,200
Full house DPC£1,450 – £3,900
Tanking (basement/cellar)£1,950 – £7,800
Cavity wall tie replacement£50 – £50

Mini damp proofing cost calculator

Three quick inputs and we'll email you an indicative range. Run the full calculator for a postcode-adjusted estimate.

Total length of walls being treated. Single terrace wall: 4–6m. Whole house ground floor: 25–40m.

Unit: linear m

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What's included in East Midlands damp proofing costs

  • Type of damp — rising, penetrating, or condensation need different treatments.
  • Extent of affected area — full house vs single wall.
  • Tanking vs injection — tanking is more expensive but needed for below-ground.
  • Access and making good — replastering and finishes after treatment.
  • Location — London and the South East typically cost more.

5 line items every fair damp proofing quote should include

Use this checklist to spot missing scope before you sign — each item names what should be priced and what to ask for if it isn't.

  1. 1

    Pre-quote moisture survey with hygrometer readings

    Before any quote, a reputable PCA-member damp specialist surveys with a calibrated hygrometer (carbide or capacitance), takes moisture readings at multiple wall heights (150mm, 500mm, 1m), and identifies the actual cause: rising damp (capillary moisture from below DPC), penetrating damp (external water ingress), or condensation. A quote without this survey is a quote without diagnosis — and the wrong treatment for the wrong cause is the most expensive mistake in damp work.

    Fair UK range: £200–£450 for an independent PCA-member survey; often refunded against works if you proceed.

    Ask: Will you provide a written survey with hygrometer readings at multiple wall heights and a stated cause before quoting works?

  2. 2

    Treatment system — brand, BBA approval and warranty terms

    Chemical DPC injection should use a BBA-approved cream (Safeguard Dryzone, Sovereign Damprid Pro, Permagard Permatreat). The quote should name the product, application rate (per m), and whether the manufacturer's product warranty is registered in your name. Avoid 'silicone fluid' from unbranded suppliers — these have no BBA approval and any warranty is worthless.

    Fair UK range: £60–£120 per linear metre for BBA-approved chemical injection (supply + apply).

    Ask: Which exact BBA-approved product are you using, will you register the manufacturer's warranty in my name, and can I see the BBA certificate?

  3. 3

    Re-plastering with salt-retardant render

    After damp treatment, the existing plaster contains chloride and nitrate salts that will draw moisture back through any normal replastering. Industry standard: hack off contaminated plaster up to 1m above DPC (or 300mm above highest visible damp line), apply salt-retardant render (Limelite, Thistle Renovating, or similar), then finish coat. Skipping this step is the #1 reason damp 'returns' six months after treatment.

    Fair UK range: £35–£75 per m² for hack-off + salt-retardant render system + finish skim.

    Ask: What height are you hacking off plaster to, what salt-retardant render system are you using, and how long should I wait before painting?

  4. 4

    Drying period and decoration guidance

    After treatment and replastering, walls need 4–8 weeks drying before painting (dependent on weather and ventilation). Premature painting traps moisture and the customer thinks 'damp came back' — but it's actually trapped construction moisture. The quote should include written drying guidance, ideal mist-coat ratio, and breathable paint recommendation (silicate or mineral) for the first 12 months.

    Fair UK range: Usually included in the works quote, but written guidance should be provided as standard.

    Ask: What's the written drying guidance, when can I paint, and which paint type do you recommend for the first year?

  5. 5

    GPI- or HomePro-backed insurance warranty

    A 20- or 30-year warranty from a one-person company is worthless if they go bust. The UK gold standard is a GPI (Guarantee Protection Insurance) or HomePro insurance-backed warranty — the cover continues even if the contractor disappears. Ask for the warranty certificate name and policy number; verify on the GPI/HomePro website. PCA members offer this as standard.

    Fair UK range: Warranty cost is usually built into the works price (£50–£150 per linear m of treatment).

    Ask: Is your warranty insurance-backed by GPI, HomePro or QANW, what's the policy number to verify, and is it transferable to a future buyer?

Want this run on your actual damp proofing quote? Upload it and our AI Quote Checker flags missing line items, overcharges and the questions worth asking.

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7 red flags that mean you might be overcharged on a damp proofing quote

UK-specific signals — each red flag explains why it matters and the question that surfaces the truth.

  • Quote provided without a moisture survey, hygrometer readings or stated cause

    Why it matters: Damp specialists who quote without surveying are guessing at best, mis-selling at worst. Many UK 'damp problems' diagnosed as rising damp are actually condensation, leaking pipes, blocked airbricks or external defects (cracked render, missing pointing). A chemical DPC won't fix any of those — and you've wasted £1,000–£3,000.

    Ask: Can you carry out a hygrometer survey at multiple wall heights and provide a written diagnosis before quoting works?

  • Claims to be a 'damp specialist' but is not a PCA (Property Care Association) member

    Why it matters: PCA membership is the UK gold standard for damp, timber and waterproofing specialists. Members must hold CSRT (Certificated Surveyor in Remedial Treatments) qualification and follow a code of practice. Anyone can call themselves a 'damp specialist'; PCA membership is the only assessed competence signal that means anything. The PCA website lists members.

    Ask: Are you a PCA member, what's your registration number to verify on the PCA website, and is your surveyor CSRT-qualified?

  • Lifetime warranty offered with no insurance backing (just the company's own promise)

    Why it matters: A 20-year company warranty from a one-person business that's been trading 18 months is meaningless — they may not exist in 5 years. The UK gold standard is a GPI/HomePro insurance-backed warranty that continues even if the contractor goes bust. 'Lifetime' with no insurance backing is a marketing tactic, not consumer protection.

    Ask: Is the warranty insurance-backed (GPI, HomePro or QANW), what's the policy number, and what happens to the warranty if you stop trading?

  • No mention of replastering with salt-retardant render after treatment

    Why it matters: Treatment alone doesn't fix damp visibility. Existing plaster is loaded with chloride and nitrate salts that draw moisture back through whatever replastering goes on top. Without salt-retardant render to 1m height, the damp 'returns' within 6 months — but it's actually salt contamination, not treatment failure. The quote should explicitly include this work.

    Ask: Will you hack off contaminated plaster to 1m height and apply a salt-retardant render system as part of this quote?

  • Pushy sales tactics, 'today only' pricing, or pressure to sign on the day

    Why it matters: Genuine PCA members survey, write a report, and let you decide. High-pressure damp salespeople (often working for franchises with commission targets) are a long-standing UK consumer issue — multiple Trading Standards prosecutions exist. Any 'discount if you sign today' is a structural red flag, not a deal.

    Ask: Can I have the quote in writing with at least 14 days to consider it, and is the price the same regardless of when I sign?

  • Recommends chemical DPC for a property that already has a slate or bitumen DPC

    Why it matters: Most UK houses built after 1875 have an existing physical DPC (slate or bitumen). A chemical injection in addition is rarely needed — and is sometimes recommended where the actual problem is a bridged DPC (raised flowerbed, render covering the DPC line, internal floor level above DPC). Fixing the bridge costs £100–£400; chemical DPC costs £1,500+. Make sure they've checked first.

    Ask: Have you checked whether there's an existing physical DPC, whether it's bridged externally or internally, and whether the bridge can be removed instead of injecting?

  • No deposit-protection arrangement and asks for >25% upfront

    Why it matters: Damp works are often £2,000–£8,000 — large enough that deposit protection matters. UK norm: ≤25% deposit (often nil for established PCA members), staged payments, balance on completion. Heavy upfront asks suggest cash flow problems and your money has no protection if the company collapses mid-job.

    Ask: Can we agree maximum 20% deposit, with payment by bank transfer (paper trail), and is the deposit protected by any scheme?

Spot a couple of these on your damp proofing quote? Upload it for a full red-flag scan and fair-rate comparison.

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How to negotiate a damp proofing quote

A simple framework, a verbatim script you can paste into an email or text, and the topic-specific levers that move the price.

Framework

  1. 1Get an INDEPENDENT survey first — pay £200–£400 for a PCA-member surveyor who isn't quoting for the works. Their diagnosis is worth its weight in gold; you avoid £2,000+ of unnecessary treatment if the problem is actually condensation or external water ingress.
  2. 2Take the independent survey to three PCA-member specialists for quotes. Same diagnosis, same scope, same warranty terms. Without identical scope, quotes can't be compared.
  3. 3Compare line by line: survey, treatment system (BBA-approved product?), replastering scope, warranty backing, payment terms. Cheapest is usually the riskiest in damp work — chase warranty backing and PCA membership, not headline price.
  4. 4Go back to your preferred specialist with the median figure. Ask for justification or alignment on specific items. Don't be afraid to negotiate — PCA members compete and there's typically 5–15% movement on a £2,000+ job.

Verbatim script

Thanks for the survey and quote. I've had two other quotes from PCA-member specialists with the same diagnosis (rising damp affecting the rear elevation, 8 linear metres) and the same treatment scope — Dryzone injection + 1m salt-retardant render + GPI-backed warranty. Yours is competitive but it's £X above the median on the replastering scope. Could you walk me through what's different about your approach that justifies it, or align to the median if it's the same scope? I'd prefer to use you based on the survey detail and reviews, but I need the numbers to align.

Topic-specific levers

  • Get the independent survey first — separate from the quoting contractor. The £300 cost is reclaimed many times over if the diagnosis points away from chemical DPC towards a £200 fix (clearing airbricks, removing render bridging the DPC, fixing a leaking gutter).
  • Hack off old plaster yourself if you're handy — £15–£25/m² of saved labour on a typical 8m × 1m replaster strip (£120–£200 saving). Wear PPE — old plaster dust contains lime and possibly mould spores.
  • Stage the works if cash flow matters — treat the worst wall first, monitor for 6 months, decide on the rest. Damp doesn't spread fast; you don't need to do everything at once.
  • Bundle damp + ventilation works — most damp problems improve with better ventilation (extractor fans, PIV unit). PCA members often offer combined quotes at 10–15% less than two separate trades.
  • Off-peak booking — damp specialists are flat-out October–March (visible damp season). May–August is quieter and you can often negotiate 5–10% off.

Want to know which line items on your damp proofing quote are above market before you negotiate? Upload it for a fair-rate comparison.

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10 questions to ask before hiring a damp specialist

Vet on competence, insurance, paperwork and process — not price alone. Each question spells out the answer you want and why.

  1. 1. Are you a PCA (Property Care Association) member, and what's your registration number to verify on the PCA website?

    Why it matters: PCA membership is the UK gold standard for damp work. Members must hold CSRT qualification, carry insurance, follow a code of practice, and offer GPI-backed warranties. Non-PCA members may be excellent — but you've no recognised body to escalate to if things go wrong.

  2. 2. Is your surveyor CSRT (Certificated Surveyor in Remedial Treatments) qualified, and will the survey be in writing with hygrometer readings?

    Why it matters: CSRT is the recognised UK qualification for damp diagnosis. A written survey with calibrated hygrometer readings at multiple wall heights is the only basis for accurate diagnosis — and the only thing you can challenge later if treatment fails.

  3. 3. Will the warranty be insurance-backed by GPI, HomePro, QANW or similar — and is it transferable to a future buyer?

    Why it matters: Self-issued warranties depend on the company surviving. Insurance-backed warranties continue even if the contractor goes bust. Transferability matters at sale — buyers' surveyors increasingly ask for damp warranties in transferable form.

  4. 4. Which specific BBA-approved product are you using for the treatment, and can I see the BBA certificate?

    Why it matters: BBA (British Board of Agrément) certification is the UK product approval body. Treatments using BBA-approved products (Dryzone, Damprid Pro, Permatreat) carry manufacturer warranties — non-BBA 'silicone fluid' does not. Ask to see the certificate, not just the verbal answer.

  5. 5. Can I see two recent (last 6 months) damp jobs in this region — ideally with photos at the painted-finish stage and a phone number?

    Why it matters: Damp work quality only shows months after the job is done — when walls have dried and been redecorated. Recent local references with phoneable contacts let you ask: did the damp come back, did the company return for snagging, was the work properly disruptive.

  6. 6. Do you carry public liability insurance at £2M minimum, and can I see the certificate with the expiry date?

    Why it matters: Damp works involve hacking out plaster and drilling into walls — real risk of damaging electrics, pipes, or neighbouring property in flats. £2M is UK norm. Ask for the certificate, not the verbal answer; check the expiry covers your project.

  7. 7. What's your payment schedule, and is the deposit protected by any scheme?

    Why it matters: Fair UK norm for damp work: ≤25% deposit, staged at start of works + completion. No deposit protection scheme exists for damp specifically, but bank transfer (not cash) leaves a paper trail. Heavy upfront asks suggest cash flow risk.

  8. 8. Are you VAT registered, and will I get a proper VAT invoice with your VAT number?

    Why it matters: VAT registration signals an established business above £90k turnover. Proper invoicing protects you under the Consumer Rights Act and is essential evidence for warranty enforcement. Cash-only deals forfeit consumer protection.

  9. 9. What happens if damp returns within the warranty period — what's the response time and what's the process?

    Why it matters: A reputable PCA member commits to a documented response (e.g. 'survey within 14 days, remedial works within 60 days at no cost'). Vague answers ('we'll come back if there's a problem') are warranty in name only.

  10. 10. Have you checked whether the existing physical DPC is bridged externally or internally, and would removing the bridge fix the issue without chemical injection?

    Why it matters: A reputable specialist looks at the cheapest legitimate fix first. Bridged DPC (raised flowerbed, render across the DPC line, internal floor level above DPC) is a common cause of 'rising damp' that doesn't need treatment — just removal of the bridge. Anyone who jumps straight to chemical injection without checking is selling, not diagnosing.

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