When you instruct a residential property conveyancing solicitor to oversee the buying or selling of a home, you want to be safe in the knowledge that the transaction will be carried out smoothly, efficiently and, most importantly, with complete attention to detail.
The last thing a house buyer wants to find out, when they move into their new home, is that a previously undisclosed public right of way runs through their back garden and that throughout the year a procession of ramblers will want to traipse through your raised beds as they make their way to their next meeting point.
Property conveyancing solicitors have a duty to carry out a number of searches and enquiries regarding the nature of house sales and purchases which they have been instructed to oversee and all reputable practices will be well aware of the many pitfalls apparent in the residential conveyancing process.
Healys expert team of property solicitors in London and Brighton have many years' experience in providing an expert and client-focused conveyancing service for house buyers and sellers all over the UK. Whether you want to purchase an isolated home in a rural idyll, or are searching for a regenerated historic property in the nation's capital, you will need the services of experts to make sure all procedures run smoothly and there are no nasty surprises or hidden restrictions which will affect your sale, or purchase.
To highlight the manifold issues surrounding property law and the necessity of having an expert conveyancing team to help you, we have compiled a selection of articles on the pitfalls of house buying and selling in the UK.
- Residential property and rights of way
- Conveyancing solicitor and village greens
- Boundary disputes
- Restrictive covenants
- Heritage sites and property solicitors
- Conservation area property conveyancing information
- Rural planning rules
- Trees, hedges and residential conveyancing
- Rights to light and residential conveyancing
- Flooding problems and conveyancing solicitor
- Property solicitor for neighbour disputes
- Home extensions
- Ex-council homes and residential conveyancing
- Residential conveyancing on historic property
- Potential pitfalls in house buying and selling




