Silence from a neighbour does not stop your project. The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 has a clear legal process for exactly this situation — and it protects your right to proceed.
Step-by-step: what happens next
Once a valid notice is served, your neighbour must reply in writing — a verbal response does not count. They can consent, dissent, or say nothing.
🕒 14-day windowIf there is no response after 14 days, a second notice must be served giving your neighbour a final 10 days to consent or appoint a surveyor.
🕒 10-day final noticeA dispute is formally deemed to exist. Both parties appoint surveyors — or you can appoint one on your neighbour’s behalf if they still do not respond within 10 days of your request.
🕒 3–5 daysThe surveyor prepares a legally binding Award setting out how works proceed, access rights, protections, and working hours. Works can begin once it is served.
🕒 3–6 weeksWe handle the counter notice, surveyor appointment, and Award — keeping your project legally on track.
Get a quote 📞 020 3633 0823Common myths — busted
Typical timeline from ignored notice to starting works
| Stage | Timeframe |
|---|---|
| Initial notice period | 14 days |
| 10-day counter notice | 10 days |
| Surveyor appointment | 3–5 days |
| Party Wall Award preparation | 3–6 weeks |
| Notice period before starting works | 14 days |
| Total from ignored notice to starting works | 6–10 weeks |
Frequently asked questions
We handle the counter notice, surveyor appointment, and Party Wall Award — keeping your build on track.