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Does your home have a problem with crumbling plaster?
Are you renting from the Council or a Housing Association?
You may be entitled to compensation if:
Living in a home with crumbling plaster can feel messy, and unsafe. What may start as small cracks, loose patches, or bubbling walls can quickly turn into falling plaster, damaged surfaces, and ongoing worry about what is happening behind the walls or ceiling. In many cases, crumbling plaster is not simply a cosmetic issue. It can be a sign of damp, water ingress, poor repairs, or deeper structural problems within the property.
If you are a tenant in social housing, such as a council house or flat, or a property managed by a housing association or charitable organisation, your landlord is legally required to ensure your home is safe and fit for habitation. If plaster in your home is crumbling and your landlord has failed to put things right after being told about the problem, you could be entitled to repairs and compensation through a housing disrepair claim.
At SDS Solicitors, we understand how stressful it is to live in poor housing conditions and be left waiting for action. Our dedicated Housing Disrepair team has more than 25 years of experience helping tenants hold landlords to account. We work hard to make sure essential repairs are carried out properly and that our clients recover the compensation they deserve.
If your landlord is ignoring failing plaster in your home, contact our team today. We specialise in Crumbling Plaster Disrepair Claims and offer a No Win No Fee consultation with no upfront costs to you.
Crumbling plaster is often a sign that something more serious is wrong in the property. Plaster may crack, flake, bulge, become powdery, or fall away altogether. Sometimes it affects one small area. In other cases, it spreads across walls or ceilings and continues to get worse over time. While very minor surface marks or hairline cracks may amount to ordinary wear, loose, blown, or collapsing plaster is far more likely to amount to disrepair.
This matters because landlords are responsible for keeping the structure and interior repair issues of a rented home in proper condition where the law requires it. Where plaster is failing because of damp, leaks, water penetration, defective repairs, or movement within the building, the issue is rarely just decorative. It can indicate that the property is not being maintained as it should be.
Under section 11 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, landlords generally must keep the structure and exterior of the property in repair, and maintain installations for water, heating, sanitation, gas, and electricity. Crumbling plaster may also engage the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018 if it forms part of a condition that makes the property unsafe or unfit to live in. If the landlord is notified of the problem and fails to deal with it within a reasonable time, they may be in breach of their legal obligations.
Sheldon Davidson LL.B (HONS)
Managing Director
Crumbling plaster is often the visible symptom of another defect within the property. One of the most common causes is damp. Water leaking through roofs, walls, windows, or pipework can weaken plaster over time until it begins to blister, stain, or fall away. In older homes, long-term moisture problems can cause plaster to break down gradually and leave surfaces soft, powdery, or unstable.
Where damp is the underlying cause, our damp and mould solicitors can also advise on whether the wider condition of the property forms part of a housing disrepair claim.
Poor workmanship can also play a role. Some tenants find that plaster begins to fail because earlier repairs were only temporary or carried out to a poor standard. In other cases, movement in the building may cause wider cracking and separation. Whatever the cause, a landlord should not ignore the issue once it has been reported. A proper repair should deal with the underlying source of the problem, not simply cover it up with filler or paint.
Your landlord cannot simply dismiss serious plaster damage as an old property issue. If plaster is breaking away due to a repair problem within the building, they may be legally responsible for putting it right. That includes investigating the cause, carrying out suitable repairs, and making sure the work is completed to a reasonable standard.
In many cases, the landlord’s duty begins once they have been given notice of the problem. That is why it is important to report crumbling plaster clearly and in writing if possible. If you have already told your landlord and nothing meaningful has been done, or only temporary patch repairs have been carried out, you may have grounds to bring a housing disrepair claim.
At SDS Solicitors, we help tenants take action where landlords have failed to respond properly. We understand that many people are left living for months with unsafe surfaces, repeated cracking, or plaster falling from walls and ceilings. You should not be expected to live like that while your landlord delays or ignores the issue.
Dampness and mould can develop for various reasons, including structural issues, poor ventilation, and persistent leaks.
Cracks in walls allow moisture to seep in and spread.
Leaking pipes or plumbing faults let water seep into walls.
Blocked or broken gutters allow water to penetrate walls.
If your landlord has failed to resolve these problems despite being notified, they may be in breach of their legal obligations, and you are entitled to pursue a claim for disrepair.
I have been very happy with all the help your staff have given me during my claim. Mr B
I have been very happy with all the help your staff have given me during my claim.
If plaster in your home is cracking, bulging, or falling away, the first step is to report it to your landlord as soon as possible. Try to do this in writing so there is a record of when the issue was raised. Explain what is happening and mention any signs of damp, leaks, staining, or worsening damage nearby. Once the landlord has been put on notice, they should investigate the cause and arrange appropriate repairs within a reasonable time.
It is also helpful to keep photographs of the damage and a record of any complaints you have made. If the problem becomes worse, spreads, or starts affecting larger parts of the property, updated photos can help show the extent of the disrepair. If your landlord still fails to act, legal advice can help you take the matter forward and push for proper repairs.
If your landlord has failed to deal with crumbling plaster after being told about it, you may be entitled to compensation as part of a housing disrepair claim. In these cases, compensation is usually linked to the seriousness of the problem, the parts of the home affected, and how long the disrepair continued after the landlord had been given notice.
As a general guide, compensation in housing disrepair claims is often assessed as a percentage of the rent paid during the relevant period. In many cases, this can fall between 25% and 50% of the rent, depending on the severity and duration of the problem. The worse the condition and the longer it is left unresolved, the stronger the case for a higher level of compensation.
Every claim depends on its own facts. At SDS Solicitors, we look closely at the condition of the property, the landlord’s response, and the length of time you were left living with the issue. We then work to recover fair compensation while also making sure the necessary repairs are carried out.
At SDS Solicitors, we know that housing disrepair claims are about more than legal rules. They are about getting people out of poor living conditions and making sure landlords take responsibility. Our team is approachable, experienced, and committed to protecting tenants who have been left dealing with problems that should never have been ignored.
We offer a free initial consultation and handle claims on a No Win No Fee basis where appropriate. That means there is no upfront financial risk in finding out where you stand. From the moment you contact us, we will assess your circumstances, explain your rights clearly, and guide you through the claims process with honesty and care.
With SDS Solicitors, the solution to your home’s disrepair is in safe hands. Our experienced, qualified, and regulated solicitors will work to get the repairs done and pursue the compensation you may be owed.
Established in Manchester in 1997, we are a leading compensation claims law firm with a strong track record in housing disrepair matters.
Our team of Housing Disrepair Solicitors in Manchester acts regularly for clients across Greater Manchester including Ashton, Bury, Bolton, Radcliffe, Prestwich, Middleton, Failsworth, Rochdale, Oldham, and Whitefield. Our Housing Disrepair Solicitors can support your needs wherever you live in Wales, England and Northern Ireland.
We specialise in No Win No Fee compensation claims, which means if you do not win, you will not have to pay. If your landlord has failed to fix crumbling plaster in your home, contact SDS Solicitors today for a free, no obligation consultation.
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Not always. Small marks or very fine surface cracks may amount to ordinary wear over time, but bulging, blown, loose, or falling plaster is often a sign of a more serious repair issue. It may point to damp, leaks, poor workmanship, or structural movement, all of which may fall within a landlord’s repair obligations.
Yes. If the plaster is failing because of damp, water ingress, leaking pipes, or another repair issue your landlord should have addressed, you may be able to bring a housing disrepair claim. The important point is whether the landlord was told about the problem and then failed to take reasonable steps to fix it.
Yes. In most housing disrepair cases, the landlord must first be given notice of the issue. This means you should report the crumbling plaster and give them a reasonable opportunity to inspect and repair it. If they do nothing, delay unreasonably, or carry out poor temporary repairs, you may then have grounds to take legal action.
The amount depends on the seriousness of the disrepair and how long it continued after the landlord was notified. In many housing disrepair claims, compensation is assessed as a percentage of the rent paid during the affected period. As a broad guide, this is often between 25% and 50%, depending on the severity of the problem.
Yes. A landlord cannot avoid responsibility by carrying out repeated temporary fixes that do not solve the underlying issue. If the plaster continues to crack, bulge, or fall away because the real cause has not been dealt with, you may still have a valid claim.
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Sheldon Davidson