Stage 1 · Diagnose

Cracks in Walls: When to Worry (and When Not To)

Almost every UK house develops cracks. Most are harmless. A few are not. This guide helps you tell them apart, calmly.

Cracked brick wall on a UK home
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If you've just spotted a crack and your stomach has dropped, take a breath. The vast majority of cracks in UK homes are cosmetic: plaster shrinkage, seasonal movement, or normal "settling". Only a small minority are caused by subsidence, when the ground beneath the foundations moves.

This hub walks you through the visual differences. You'll learn what diagonal, stepped, hairline and door-frame cracks each mean, and the simple checks (width, location, pattern, behaviour over time) that separate "monitor it" from "get a specialist to look".

If you'd rather skip the reading: send us a photo and a UK specialist will give you a free, honest opinion, usually the same day.

Explore the guide

More about cracks in UK homes

Cracks are the most common reason a UK homeowner picks up the phone to a specialist, and the great majority turn out to be cosmetic. The British climate cycles through cold, wet winters and warmer, drier summers, and our housing stock is a mix of solid Victorian brick, post-war cavity walls, lath and plaster ceilings, and modern plasterboard. Every one of those materials moves a little with temperature and humidity, and most cracks are simply the visible record of that everyday movement.

The questions worth asking when you find a crack are always the same. How wide is it, where does it run, does it appear on both faces of the wall, and is it growing. A crack narrower than the edge of a 10p coin, sitting in a single internal wall and not visible from the outside, is rarely a structural problem. A crack that opens diagonally from a door or window frame, mirrors itself on the outside brickwork, and widens over a few months is a very different story and deserves a proper look.

Monitoring a crack at home costs nothing. Mark each end with a pencil line and the date. Photograph it against a tape measure or a coin. Check it again in a month, and after the next big change in weather. If the marks have not moved, you almost certainly have nothing to worry about. If they have, send the photos through and a vetted specialist will tell you whether it warrants a survey.

Common questions

Should I fill a crack before showing it to a specialist?
No. Leave it open. Filler hides the pattern, the width, and any fresh movement, all of which help us read the cause.
Are stepped cracks in brickwork always serious?
Not always, but they are the pattern most associated with subsidence. Stepped cracks following the mortar joints in an external wall warrant a closer look, particularly if they are wider at the top.
How quickly should I act?
There is rarely any need to panic. Subsidence develops over months and years, not days. Send a photo, get a sensible opinion, and act from there.
Free crack assessment

Worried about a crack? Get expert advice.

Free, no-obligation opinion from qualified UK specialists. Most cracks are not subsidence, and you will get a straight answer from a vetted specialist, usually the same day.

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