Damp is the single most common defect reported in building surveys of Victorian houses across London boroughs including Islington, Hackney and Lambeth. Yet it is also one of the most frequently misdiagnosed. The damp-proofing industry has a financial incentive to diagnose rising damp and sell injection treatments, when in reality the cause is almost always something simpler and cheaper to fix.
True rising damp exists but is far less common than widely believed. Most Victorian houses were built with effective damp-proof courses of slate or engineering brick. Even where these have deteriorated, capillary rise in a solid brick wall is self-limiting and rarely exceeds 300 to 500mm in height. What is commonly diagnosed as rising damp is usually caused by high external ground levels bridging the DPC, defective sub-floor ventilation causing condensation on cold walls, hygroscopic salts from historic damp attracting moisture from the air, or simply condensation mistaken for rising damp by unqualified surveyors using basic damp meters.
Victorian solid-wall construction has no cavity to intercept moisture, making the external weathering envelope critical. The most common causes of penetrating damp are blocked or broken gutters and downpipes allowing water to cascade down the wall, failed pointing allowing rain to penetrate the mortar joints, cracked or missing render, defective lead flashings at parapets, chimneys and abutments, and failed bay-top coverings. Our building pathology surveys systematically trace damp back to its source rather than simply treating the symptoms.
Victorian houses were designed with solid walls, open chimneys, suspended timber floors and single-glazed windows that provided constant natural ventilation. Modern improvements such as double glazing, blocking chimneys, solid-floor insulation and draught-proofing reduce heat loss but also reduce ventilation, trapping moisture generated by daily living. This leads to condensation on cold surfaces, particularly external walls, window reveals and behind furniture. The solution is a balance of insulation, heating and adequate ventilation.
The key to resolving damp in Victorian houses is accurate diagnosis. This means engaging an independent chartered surveyor rather than a damp-proofing company that profits from selling treatments. In most cases, the solution involves repairing external defects (rainwater goods, pointing, flashings), lowering external ground levels where they bridge the DPC, improving sub-floor ventilation, and addressing condensation through a combination of ventilation, insulation and heating. Chemical injection should be a last resort, not a first response.
True rising damp exists but is far less common than the damp-proofing industry suggests. Most cases diagnosed as rising damp are actually caused by high ground levels, condensation, defective rainwater goods or hygroscopic salts.
Most commonly defective rainwater goods, failed pointing, cracked render, defective flashings and failed bay-top coverings. Solid walls have no cavity barrier, so any external failure allows rain to penetrate directly.
Modern improvements like double glazing and blocked chimneys reduce ventilation while increasing airtightness, trapping moisture and causing condensation on cold surfaces such as external walls and window reveals.
In most cases, no. The actual cause should be diagnosed by an independent surveyor first. Chemical injection is widely oversold and should be a last resort after external defects and ventilation have been addressed.