How Long Does a Mortgage Valuation Take? A mortgage valuation may be completed quickly when reliable property data is available.
Other cases require a surveyor to visit the property before reporting to the lender.
The full timeline depends on more than the inspection itself.
Booking availability, property access and lender review can each influence progress.
Speed matters during a purchase. However, an accurate lending decision matters more than speed alone.
Mortgage Valuation Timescales
- Automated valuations may produce a result without a property visit.
- Desktop valuations use available property and market information.
- Physical valuations depend on surveyor and property access.
- The lender must review the report after it is completed.
- Unusual properties and defects can create delays.
- A completed valuation does not guarantee a mortgage offer.
When Does the Mortgage Valuation Take Place?
The lender normally arranges the valuation after receiving the full mortgage application.
Before instructing it, the lender may check basic information about:
- The applicant.
- The requested loan.
- The property.
- The deposit.
- The purchase price.
- The intended use.
Some lenders instruct the valuation early.
Others complete initial underwriting checks first.
The order depends on the lender’s process and application type.
Read our guide to the wider mortgage application process.
How Long Does an Automated Valuation Take?
An automated valuation model uses electronic property data.
It may consider:
- Land Registry information.
- Recent local transactions.
- Property characteristics.
- Previous valuation data.
- Market trends.
- Location information.
No surveyor normally visits the property.
The technical assessment may happen quickly. However, the application still requires lender review.
An automated result may be unsuitable when the property is unusual or evidence is limited.
How Long Does a Desktop Valuation Take?
A desktop valuation is completed without a full property inspection.
A valuer may assess:
- Comparable sales.
- Property records.
- Mapping information.
- Photographs.
- Floor plans.
- Local market evidence.
The process avoids arranging physical access.
However, the valuer still needs enough reliable information.
A physical inspection may be requested when the desktop evidence is insufficient.
How Long Does a Physical Valuation Take?
A physical valuation requires an appointment.
The exact timeline can depend on:
- Surveyor availability.
- Seller availability.
- Estate agent access.
- Tenant access.
- Property location.
- Property complexity.
- Local demand for surveyors.
- Whether further reports are needed.
The inspection itself may be brief because it is not a full building survey.
The valuer must then prepare and submit the report.
What Can Delay a Mortgage Valuation?
Difficulty arranging access
The surveyor may need the seller, estate agent or tenant to provide access.
Missed appointments can delay the report.
Incorrect contact details
Outdated seller or estate agent details can prevent the surveyor arranging an appointment.
Check that the lender has accurate information.
Unusual construction
Non-standard materials may require further review.
The lender may request additional evidence before making a decision.
Property defects
The valuer may identify an issue requiring specialist investigation.
Possible examples include:
- Structural movement.
- Damp.
- Roof damage.
- Japanese knotweed.
- Unsafe alterations.
- Mining risks.
- Cladding concerns.
Missing planning or building information
Alterations may require evidence of permission or approval.
The lender may wait for the solicitor or applicant to provide documentation.
Limited comparable properties
An unusual home may have few recent comparable sales.
The valuer may need more time to establish suitable evidence.
What Happens After the Valuation Visit?
The surveyor sends the report to the lender.
The lender then considers:
- The assessed value.
- The requested mortgage.
- The resulting loan-to-value.
- Property suitability.
- Any recommended conditions.
- Any further reports required.
The case may then return to the underwriter.
The lender could approve the property, request more information or revise the mortgage amount.
MoneyHelper explains that property issues or overvaluation can delay the case or reduce the available loan.
Read its overview of the mortgage loan application process.
Does Valuation Booked Mean the Mortgage Is Approved?
No.
A valuation appointment means the property assessment has reached that stage.
The lender must still consider the complete application.
Outstanding checks may include:
- Income verification.
- Bank statements.
- Credit commitments.
- Deposit evidence.
- Identity checks.
- Employment information.
- Solicitor enquiries.
- Property conditions.
A mortgage offer is usually issued after all necessary checks are satisfied.
Can You Speed Up a Mortgage Valuation?
The applicant cannot control every stage.
However, several practical steps may help:
- Provide accurate estate agent details.
- Tell the seller an appointment may be requested.
- Respond quickly to lender questions.
- Supply documents in the requested format.
- Disclose unusual property features early.
- Avoid changing important application details without advice.
- Confirm tenant access for a rental property.
An organised application reduces preventable delays.
What If the Valuation Is Taking Too Long?
Ask your adviser or lender whether:
- The valuation has been instructed.
- An appointment has been booked.
- Access has been confirmed.
- The report has been received.
- The lender requires more information.
- The property needs a specialist report.
- Underwriting has resumed.
The delay may sit with the valuer, lender, seller or another party.
Identifying the stage makes the next action clearer.
How Can a Mortgage Adviser Help?
A mortgage adviser may track the case and explain where the valuation sits within the application.
They can also contact the lender when the report appears delayed.
This does not guarantee a faster decision.
However, it can reveal missing information before more time is lost.
First-time buyers can also review the wider purchase stages through Connect Lifetime’s first-time buyer mortgage guide.
Speak to Connect Mortgages
A mortgage valuation is one stage within a wider lending decision.
Knowing the current stage can make an uncertain waiting period more manageable.
Connect Mortgages can help you prepare and understand the lender’s next steps.
Speak with a mortgage adviser about your proposed mortgage.
FAQs About Mortgage Valuation Times
Can a mortgage valuation happen on the same day?
An automated assessment may happen quickly. Physical inspections require an appointment.
How long does the valuation report take?
This depends on the valuation method, property and surveyor’s workload.
Does the buyer attend a mortgage valuation?
Usually not. The lender or valuation firm arranges access with the relevant party.
Can the lender offer a mortgage before the valuation?
A decision in principle may be available earlier. A formal offer usually requires the property checks.
Why has my lender changed to a physical valuation?
The available electronic data may be insufficient for a reliable assessment.
Does a quick valuation mean the mortgage will be approved?
No. The lender must still complete its remaining underwriting checks.
Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.




