Are you buying/selling at auction?

Auction red flags what to watch before you bid

Many auction problems repeat. Use this hub to spot red flags early, understand what they mean, and decide your next step.

1. Short leases at auction

Short-lease properties are common in the UK auction market often because the lease length makes them harder to sell privately. They can represent opportunity, but only if you understand the cost, lender impact, and legal position before you bid. Once the hammer falls, the risk is usually yours.

What counts as a “short lease”

There is no single legal definition, but in practice:

The key threshold is 80 years. Once a lease drops below this, extending it becomes more expensive due to marriage value being payable.

Why short leases matter

A short lease can affect:

Resale value

Buyers factor in extension cost and hassle

Mortgage availability

Many lenders will not lend, or impose conditions

Cost of ownership

Lease extension premiums can be substantial

Marketability

The pool of future buyers may be limited

At auction, properties are often priced to reflect these issues but not always accurately.

What to check in the auction pack

A careful review of the legal pack should cover:

Unexpired term

Exact years remaining, not estimates

Ground rent provisions

Escalation clauses can affect value and lending

Lease extension rights

Whether a statutory extension is available

Ownership period

Whether the seller has owned the flat for two years (relevant to statutory claims)

Restrictions and clauses

Forfeiture, consent requirements, or unusual obligations

Special Conditions of Sale

Clauses preventing post-completion claims or placing risk squarely on the buyer

Do not assume you can extend immediately or cheaply this depends on the lease and the seller’s position.

Practical options for buyers

Depending on the lease length and your objectives, buyers may:

Short leases are not inherently bad but they must be approached with clear eyes and realistic figures.

Thinking of bidding on a short lease?

Short leases are one of the most misunderstood auction risks. A focused auction pack review will confirm the lease length, flag lender and extension issues, and explain your options fast.

2. Missing searches in an auction pack

In the UK auction market, it is not unusual for a legal pack to be incomplete. One of the most common red flags is missing property searches. Unlike private treaty purchases, auction buyers usually exchange contracts immediately often with limited information. Understanding what searches are missing, and what risk that creates, is critical before you bid.

What searches are usually relevant

The searches required will depend on the property type and location, but a typical UK residential or mixed‑use auction purchase may involve:

Local authority search

Planning permissions, building regulations, highways, enforcement notices

Drainage & water search

Connection to mains water and sewerage, responsibility for pipes

Environmental search

Contamination, landfill, flood risk

Chancel repair liability search

Historic church repair liability (still relevant in some areas)

Coal mining or other area-specific searches

Common in certain parts of England and Wales

Auction packs frequently include no searches at all, or only partial or outdated results.

Why missing searches matter

Searches reveal issues that may:

Once contracts are exchanged at auction, you are committed. Missing searches mean you may be buying blind to serious legal or practical problems, with no right to renegotiate later.

How special conditions sometimes deal with missing searches

Auction Special Conditions of Sale often address missing searches by:

These clauses are designed to protect the seller. They rarely help the buyer and they can remove arguments you might otherwise rely on in a private sale.

Practical options for buyers

Depending on time before the auction and your risk tolerance, buyers may:

The key is to make a conscious, priced decision, not an accidental one.

Want to know what’s missing before you bid?

Missing searches are easy to overlook but can carry long-term consequences. A focused auction pack review will identify absent searches, explain the risks, and help you decide whether to bid and at what level.

3. Tenanted properties at auction

Tenanted lots are common in the UK auction market, particularly where a property is being sold by a landlord, lender, or receiver. While rental income can be attractive, uncertainty around occupation is one of the biggest auction risks. Before bidding, it is vital to establish who is in occupation, on what terms, and what rights they have.

Tenanted vs “vacant possession”

A property described as tenanted means there is an occupier with legal rights to remain, usually under a tenancy or licence.

Vacant possession, by contrast, means the property should be empty on completion. At auction, however, this is not always guaranteed unless clearly and properly documented.

Problems arise where:

If vacant possession is critical to your plans, the wording of the contract matters.

Key documents to look for in the auction pack

A proper auction pack for a tenanted property should include, or at least refer to:

Tenancy agreement

Type of tenancy (e.g. AST), start date, term, and rent

Rent schedule

Confirming rent payable, arrears, and payment history

Deposit information

Amount held and where it is protected

Notices

Any possession notices served or proposed

Special Conditions of Sale

Clauses confirming the buyer takes subject to the tenancy

If documents are missing, unclear, or contradictory, assume the risk has not been resolved.

Key risks for auction buyers

Tenanted properties can carry additional risks, including:

Unclear occupation status

Occupiers without formal agreements or with historic rights

Rent arrears

Which usually pass to the buyer

Deposit non-compliance

Affecting possession rights

Delays in obtaining possession

Even where notices have been served

Reduced lender appetite

Depending on tenancy type and documentation

At auction, sellers rarely give guarantees about rent, compliance, or timescales for possession.

Practical steps before bidding

Depending on your objectives and timeframe, buyers may:

Buying a tenanted property can be a sound investment but only with a clear understanding of the legal position.

Unsure who’s in occupation?

Tenanted auction lots often involve hidden complexity. A focused auction pack review or pre-auction call can confirm occupation status, flag compliance risks, and help you decide whether to bid.

4. Title restrictions and covenants

Title restrictions and covenants are a frequent and often overlooked issue in the UK auction market. They are legally binding obligations or limitations attached to the land itself, not the owner. At auction, these risks are rarely explained by the seller, and once contracts are exchanged, they are usually the buyer’s responsibility.

What restrictions and covenants are

In simple terms:

These provisions can date back decades but may still be fully enforceable today.

How they affect use, resale, and works

Restrictions and covenants can have a direct impact on:

Intended use

Residential, commercial, HMO, or short-term letting may be restricted

Development and alterations

Extensions, conversions, or change of use may be prohibited

Resale and mortgageability

Lenders and future buyers may be deterred

Ongoing costs or obligations

Maintenance or contribution requirements

At auction, properties are sometimes marketed with development potential that is not supported by the title.

What to look for in the title documents

A review of the legal pack should focus on:

Title register entries

Especially the charges and restrictions sections

Historic conveyances or transfers

Where older covenants are often contained

Benefiting land

Who can enforce the covenant?

Wording and scope

How wide or specific is the restriction?

Special Conditions of Sale

Clauses confirming the buyer accepts all title matters

Vague or historic wording should not be dismissed without understanding its potential effect.

Practical options for buyers

Once restrictions or covenants are identified, buyers may:

The key is to understand whether a restriction is theoretical or a real barrier to your plans.

Unsure what the title really allows?

Title restrictions and covenants can significantly affect value and future use. A focused auction pack review will identify problem provisions, explain what they mean in practice, and help you decide whether to bid.

5. Rights of way and access

Access is fundamental to the value and usability of a property. In the UK auction market, rights of way and access problems are a frequent red flag often buried in title documents or vaguely referenced in the legal pack. Once you exchange contracts at auction, any access issue is almost always the buyer’s risk, making pre‑bid scrutiny essential.

Why access issues are serious

Problems with access can:

In extreme cases, a property may have no legally enforceable access at all only a practical or historic route that can be withdrawn.

What to check in the auction pack

A careful review of the pack should focus on both what is shown and what is missing:

Title plan and register

Do the boundaries align with the physical access route?

Express rights of way

Are rights granted in the title, and are they adequate for the property’s use?

Easements and reservations

Look for rights in favour of neighbours or rights reserved out of the title

Adopted road indicators

Is the access road publicly adopted or privately maintained?

Legal pack wording

Phrases such as “access as enjoyed” or “no warranty as to rights of way” are warning signs

Where access relies on third‑party land, the detail and wording of the rights matter.

Practical options for buyers

Depending on the nature of the issue and time available before the auction, buyers may:

At auction, access problems are rarely negotiable after the hammer falls.

Practical options for buyers

Depending on time before the auction and your risk tolerance, buyers may:

The key is to make a conscious, priced decision, not an accidental one.

Unsure about access or rights of way?

Rights of way and access issues are easy to overlook but can have serious legal and commercial consequences. A focused auction pack review will identify access risks, explain what the title really grants, and help you decide whether to bid.

6. Unregistered land at auction

Unregistered land still appears in the UK auction market, particularly with older properties, estates, rural land, and probate sales. While buying unregistered land is perfectly lawful, it involves a different legal process and can introduce delay, uncertainty, and additional cost if not handled properly before bidding.

What unregistered land means

Most land in England and Wales is registered at HM Land Registry, but some property has never been registered because it has not changed hands since compulsory registration applied.

With unregistered land:

Registration is triggered automatically when the property is purchased.

Why unregistered land can slow completion or registration

Unregistered land does not usually prevent completion, but it can:

In auction transactions, tight completion deadlines and limited seller warranties can amplify these risks.

What to look for in the auction pack

A careful review of the legal pack should focus on:

Original title deeds

Conveyances, transfers, or mortgages

Chain of ownership

Ideally showing at least 15 years of clear title

Plans and descriptions

Do they match the physical boundaries?

Rights and covenants

Contained within historic documents

Statutory declarations

Explaining missing deeds or long use

If the evidence of title is incomplete, the buyer may bear the risk of curing it after completion.

Practical options for buyers

Depending on the quality of the title evidence and your objectives, buyers may:

Unregistered land is not inherently problematic but it must be approached with care.

Unsure about unregistered title?

Unregistered land requires careful handling, particularly at auction where timescales are tight. A pre-auction call or focused pack review can assess the strength of the title evidence and explain what will be required after completion.

7. Planning and building regs

In the UK auction market, it is common for properties to be sold with incomplete planning and building regulations paperwork. Extensions, conversions, and changes of use are often disclosed—but not fully evidenced. 

Typical missing documents

Auction packs frequently refer to works having been carried out, but may lack key supporting documents such as:

In many cases, the seller will state that documents are “unavailable” or that the buyer must rely on their own enquiries.

Auction packs frequently include no searches at all, or only partial or outdated results.

Why planning and building regs gaps matter

Missing or incomplete documentation can create serious risks, including:

At auction, sellers rarely give warranties. The absence of paperwork does not mean compliance it simply means the risk has shifted to the buyer.

Practical options for buyers

Depending on the nature of the works and time before the auction, buyers may:

The key is to understand whether the issue is low-risk and historic or potentially serious and ongoing.

Unsure what’s missing in your auction pack?

Planning and building regulations gaps are easy to miss but can have long-term consequences. A focused auction pack review will identify missing approvals, explain the risk, and help you decide whether to proceed.

8. Onerous special conditions

In the UK auction market, the Special Conditions of Sale are where many of the real risks and costs are hidden. These clauses sit alongside the standard auction conditions and often shift significant financial and legal responsibility to the buyer. Missing or misunderstanding them can turn an apparently good deal into an expensive mistake.

Common examples of onerous special conditions

Special Conditions vary from lot to lot, but commonly include clauses requiring the buyer to:

Pay the seller’s costs

legal fees, auctioneer’s fees, managing agent fees, or search fees

Complete within a very short timeframe

sometimes less than the usual 20 working days

Pay high interest on late completion

often well above base rate and calculated daily

Cover administrative charges

notice of transfer, deed of covenant, licence-to-assign or landlord compliance fees

Accept documents “as is”

with no right to raise requisitions or object after exchange

Indemnify the seller

against historic breaches, arrears, or third-party claims

Individually these clauses may seem manageable. Combined, they can add thousands of pounds to the true purchase cost.

How to spot onerous clauses quickly

When reviewing an auction pack, focus first on the Special Conditions of Sale, not the title documents. A solicitor will typically:

If the wording feels one-sided, that is usually intentional.

Practical options for buyers

Once you understand the special conditions, buyers can make an informed decision:

At auction, you rarely have the ability to renegotiate these terms. The decision is usually bid or walk away.

Want help interpreting special conditions?

Onerous special conditions are one of the most common reasons auction purchases run over budget. A focused special conditions guide and auction pack review will explain what the clauses really mean, what they could cost, and whether the risk is worth taking.

9. Leasehold arrears and apportionments

Buying a leasehold property at a UK auction can be quick and decisive—but it also carries specific risks around service charge and ground rent arrears. Unlike private treaty sales, the auction contract often shifts responsibility in ways buyers don’t expect. 

What arrears and apportionments are

Arrears are unpaid sums already due under the lease, most commonly:

Apportionments deal with how ongoing costs are split between seller and buyer on completion. In a private sale, charges are usually apportioned to the completion date. At auction, this is not automatic and depends entirely on the contract.

How auction contracts can allocate responsibility

Auction contracts frequently exclude standard apportionment provisions or include clauses stating that the buyer:

Special Conditions of Sale may also require the buyer to indemnify the seller against any future claims by the landlord or managing agent, even if the charges relate to a period before completion.

What to check in the legal pack and special conditions

Before bidding, a solicitor should review the auction pack with a focus on:

Service charge statements

Are there historic arrears? Are accounts finalised or estimated?

Ground rent demands

Is rent escalating or unpaid?

Special Conditions of Sale

Any clauses passing arrears to the buyer or excluding apportionments

Replies from the managing agent

Look for references to disputes, anticipated major works, or balancing charges

Lease provisions

Enforcement rights, interest on arrears, and recovery of legal costs

Practical options for buyers

Depending on timing and appetite for risk, buyers may:

Failing to deal with arrears promptly can lead to interest, legal costs, restrictions on resale, or even forfeiture proceedings in extreme cases.

Need a leasehold auction pack review?

Leasehold arrears are one of the most common and costly auction red flags. A focused pre-auction leasehold pack review can identify who really pays, flag hidden liabilities, and help you bid with confidence.

10. Buyer pays seller legal fees

In many UK property auctions, buyers are required to pay the seller’s legal fees as part of the transaction. This obligation is usually set out in the Special Conditions of Sale and can materially increase the overall cost of purchasing the property.

Where this appears (special conditions)

The requirement for a buyer to pay the seller’s legal fees is not a statutory requirement. It is a contractual term imposed by the seller and included within the auction documentation.

It is typically found:

These fees are not included in the guide price and are often payable regardless of whether the amount is proportionate, unless the clause expressly caps the figure.

What it can cost and how it’s described

Seller legal fees payable by the buyer commonly range from £500 to £2,000 plus VAT, though higher sums are not unusual for:

In most cases, these fees are fixed and non-negotiable, and are payable on completion irrespective of the purchase price.

Practical options (budget and price risk)

If this clause appears in the legal pack, buyers should consider the following:

1.

Budget accurately

Factor the seller’s legal fees into your total acquisition costs when setting your maximum bid.

2.

Reassess value

A low guide price can be misleading once seller fees, buyer’s premiums, SDLT, and other costs are taken into account.

3.

Obtain a legal review

Some clauses impose a fixed fee, while others allow the seller to recover open-ended costs.

Auction Solicitor