Quick answer
Understand fixed fee conveyancing, what may be excluded and how to compare quotes properly.
The right next step depends on the facts, documents, deadlines and level of risk. This guide explains what to check, what to prepare and when it may be useful to request quotes from legal professionals or providers who handle this type of matter.
Fixed legal fee
One of the main points to understand before comparing providers or requesting quotes.
Common exclusions
One of the main points to understand before comparing providers or requesting quotes.
Disbursements
One of the main points to understand before comparing providers or requesting quotes.
Quote comparison
One of the main points to understand before comparing providers or requesting quotes.
On this page
Why this matters
Fixed fee conveyancing explained is an important topic for anyone dealing with conveyancing matters. The practical answer often depends on the documents available, the value or urgency of the matter, the level of complexity and whether another party, lender, landlord, employer, beneficiary or buyer/seller is involved.
A useful quote request gives enough detail for a provider to understand the likely work involved. Vague enquiries can lead to vague responses, while a structured request makes it easier to compare scope, price, communication style and next steps.
What affects the cost or complexity?
Before choosing a provider, look beyond the headline price. Check what is included, what may be charged separately, whether VAT or third-party costs apply, who will handle the matter day to day and what information is needed before a firmer quote can be given.
Check what the provider will review, draft, submit, negotiate or manage.
Ask what is included, what is excluded and whether third-party costs may apply.
Provide documents, dates, values and relevant background as early as possible.
How to compare quotes properly
Compare conveyancing quotes should mean comparing more than the lowest headline fee. A better comparison considers whether the provider understands the issue, whether the scope is clear, what communication to expect and what extra work could change the price.
EveryLegal aims to help users prepare clearer quote requests. The goal is not to tell you which provider to instruct, but to help you understand your options before deciding what to do next.
How this fits into the conveyancing process
Conveyancing can involve contract review, title checks, searches, mortgage lender requirements, enquiries, exchange of contracts, completion and registration. The exact work depends on whether you are buying, selling, remortgaging or dealing with a leasehold, new build or more complex property.
Buyers and sellers should provide accurate property details, price information, mortgage details and timescales when requesting quotes.
What to prepare before requesting quotes
Preparing the right information helps legal providers respond more clearly and reduces the chance of quotes changing later because important details were missing.
Include this information if it applies to your situation.
Include this information if it applies to your situation.
Include this information if it applies to your situation.
Include this information if it applies to your situation.
Include this information if it applies to your situation.
Ready to compare options?
Start with a structured quote request so providers can understand the matter before responding. You are not obliged to instruct anyone who contacts you.
FAQs
Is this legal advice?
No. This guide is general information only. For advice about your specific circumstances, speak to a suitably qualified legal professional.
Should I compare more than one quote?
Comparing responses can help you understand fees, service scope, communication style and whether a provider is suitable for your matter.
What makes a quote more accurate?
Clear information, relevant documents, transaction value, deadlines and any known complications usually help providers respond more accurately.
Am I obliged to proceed after requesting quotes?
No. A quote request through EveryLegal should not oblige you to instruct any provider who contacts you.