RemedyBridgeCheck your situation

Editorial policy

Written and reviewed by the RemedyBridge team · Last reviewed June 2026

Quick answer

We aim to publish accurate, plain-English information about housing disrepair, based on primary sources such as legislation and official guidance. Content is written to be claimant-safe and is intended for review by a qualified specialist before relied-upon legal statements are finalised.

Key points

  • We cite primary sources.
  • We avoid sensational or fear-based copy.
  • We never invent statistics or outcomes.
  • Legal content is capable of specialist review.

How we write

We use authoritative primary sources, write in plain UK English, and avoid pressure tactics. We do not publish fake reviews, awards or case studies.

Authors and reviewers

Named authors and legal reviewers will be published here once appointed. Until then, content is attributed at organisation level and legal statements are pending specialist review.

You may not need us — free routes first

You can often resolve repairs for free. Depending on your situation you may be able to:

  • report repairs to your landlord in writing and keep a dated copy;
  • use your landlord’s formal complaints process;
  • take dated photos and keep a record of what you reported and when;
  • give your landlord a reasonable chance to put things right.
See all free help options

RemedyBridge provides a free initial check for housing disrepair problems in England & Wales. The result is a guide only and never tells you that you definitely have a claim. Checking your situation is free.