An Introduction to Party Wall Security for Expenses

Simply put: A temporary cash deposit while building works are carried out to a party wall.
An Introduction to Party Wall Security for Expenses
Specialist Escrow & Payment Services
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Security for Expenses ('SfE') in Party Wall matters is a way to protect both the person doing the building work and their neighbour by setting funds aside in a secure account.

Overview of the Party Wall Act and Security for Expenses

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 (‘Party Wall Act’) exists to protect building owners when a neighbour carries out work on or near a shared wall or boundary. Section 12 of this Act allows either the building owner or the adjoining owner to request a sum of money—known as ‘Security for Expenses’—to be put aside in case damage is caused, or if the works remain unfinished.

If you plan to carry out building works, your neighbour may require you to deposit these funds. Equally, if your neighbour insists you do additional work that you must partly finance, you can request they provide security too. This money is usually held in a separate, ring-fenced bank account until the surveyors on both sides confirm the work is complete and meets the necessary standards.

Who Holds Security?

The Act does not specify who should hold the funds or how. It simply says you and your neighbour must agree on acceptable arrangements for security. Many opt to use an escrow service like this Scheme. Solicitors sometimes hold these funds, but professional rules mean they can only do so in certain circumstances. Companies authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (‘FCA’) can hold escrow funds specifically for this purpose.

How Security for Expenses Escrow Works

  1. Surveyors agree the sum: Each owner appoints a surveyor, who then work out how much should be deposited and where.
  2. Escrow vs. Non-Negligence Insurance: A typical home insurance policy usually covers negligent damage, but some harm can occur without negligence. Non-negligence insurance covers this, but it may have limitations. SfE provides extra protection beyond or instead of insurance.
  3. Set up the account: After straightforward compliance checks, the escrow provider creates an account. The parties sign an Escrow Agreement (often in a standard form) to lay out the terms.
  4. Deposit the funds: When work is about to start, the agreed amount is placed in the escrow account. Everyone, including surveyors, can track these funds.
  5. Release on completion: When the surveyors confirm the work is complete and satisfactory, the funds go back to the person who deposited them.

Next Steps

You can open a free SfE account using our Scheme.  Visit our Security for Expenses Portal to get started.

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Secure.

Funds are held liquid and unencumbered at the Bank of England. Just like putting money in a safe.

Free.

We don't charge any fees.  Why? Because we make a small amount of interest on your money while we hold it.

Transparent.

We operate under clear, straightforward terms and conditions, providing clarity and comfort for all users.

Easy.

All you need to get started is a copy of your party wall award that sets out the security for expenses requirement.

UK Security for Expenses Scheme

Other Providers

High-Speed, Same-Day Account Opening.
We can open security for expenses accounts on the same day.  All you need is your Party Wall Award and your compliance information.
Often lengthy manual forms back and forth.
No account opening charges.
We don't charge anything for our accounts at all. There are no fees to pay, unless you need us to get involved in a dispute (this has never happened).  See our Scheme Rules.
Often a fixed fee + 2.5%+ of the amount of security.
No extra charges.
Unlike our competitors, we don't charge for partial releases of the security, changing bank accounts, returning funds paid from the wrong account, additional entities in your ownership structure, or changes to surveyors or other parties.
Often a complex pricing matrix of additional fees for everything.
Regulated by the FCA for the operation of payment accounts.
We are regulated by the FCA for the opening and operation of payment accounts. Some other providers carry lesser permissions (such as money remittance, which doesn't entitle them to hold security), or aren't regulated to hold client funds at all.
Simple, clear Scheme Rules.
Our Scheme Rules are straightforward, and there are only six of them.  
Often have long, complex, jargonistic terms of business.
Security held at the Bank of England.
Through our technology partners, we open an individual, named account (with its own unique sort code and account number), in which we segregate and safeguard all of your funds. This is held in cash, liquid and unencumbered, at the Bank of England.  There is no credit risk on any underlying bank.
Often use high street or private banks, who lend out your security to make money.

What our clients say

Don't just take our word for it - hear from our clients who have added trust and security to their escrow and payment requirements.