Condition survey
A thorough walk-through of the building: fabric, systems, access, security, damp, drainage. Carried out by House-vetted building surveyors who understand period homes.
Protect · Late 2026
A one-day in-person review by House-vetted specialists. A condition survey, an evidence pack, and insurance-ready documentation, filed to your HoWA record and ready for whatever comes next.
Opening to Housekeeper members first.
One day on-site. One record. Years of clarity.
The first practical act of Home Protection.
What the review covers
A thorough walk-through of the building: fabric, systems, access, security, damp, drainage. Carried out by House-vetted building surveyors who understand period homes.
Photographs, detailed notes, and a prioritised works list. Everything documented, nothing left to memory. Filed to your HoWA record for ongoing reference.
Insurance-ready reports that sit alongside your cover. When the underwriter asks questions, the answers are already prepared and properly evidenced.
How it works
I.
Register interest and we'll arrange a date. The review fits into a single day: no disruption, no scaffolding.
II.
Our House-vetted specialist visits the property and conducts a full condition survey. You don't need to prepare anything.
III.
Within a week, your evidence pack and prioritised works list arrive in your HoWA record. Clear, actionable, properly documented.
IV.
Where the review flags work, we introduce you to vetted specialists. Where it flags risk, it feeds directly into your insurance conversation.

Register interest
Leave your email and we'll write when Home Protection opens. Housekeeper members go to the front of the list.
Also from Protect
Cover that understands period homes, valuable contents, and the things a standard policy quietly excludes. Introduced by the House, underwritten by FCA-regulated specialists.
See House Approved Insurance →Connected via HoWA
Your Home Protection evidence feeds directly into the insurance introduction. One conversation, one record, no starting from scratch.
See HoWA →Prevention is quieter than repair. That's the point.