The impact of this summer’s drought and what it means to homeowners

The met office has recently advised that 2025 is THE hottest summer since records began.

The number of enquiries we have received for Structural Engineers Reports during July and August of this year has been at record levels, reflecting the dry summer and the consequential cracking and subsidence of our housing stock.

Fortunately, most damage is minor and can easily be dealt with via simple inexpensive crack repairs.

The most important issue is to establish the likely cause of the cracking and to try and prevent future worsening of cracks. This may involve addressing problematic trees, particularly on clay soils, or repairing leaking drains, which is less common on granular soils and generally not linked to dry summers.

For sellers – a Certificate of Structural Adequacy

For those currently in the process of selling their house it is important to check there are no significant cracks in the property. If there are, the sale process can normally still proceed but it will be a much smoother process if the vendor obtains an up front Structural Engineers Report which can be shared with prospective buyers. In cases where the report is favourable SERL can, by separate, additional, agreement, issue a Certificate of Structural Adequacy.

For buyers – a Structural Engineer’s Report

For those buying a property at this time it is more important than ever to check the property is sound and is not showing signs of subsidence, or cracking which might indicate the early onset of subsidence. Only a Structural Engineers Report will provide this sort of information although a RICS Surveyors Report will often provide initial useful general guidance. 

More information provided by the Met Office on the 2025 drought:

The UK has experienced one of its driest and warmest summers in decades, according to the latest data from the Met Office. The severe drought conditions seen in 2025 have followed what was already the driest spring in over 100 years, with rainfall between January and July at its lowest since 1929. By mid-May, rainfall was nearly 30% below average, and summer rainfall has since remained far below normal levels, with the UK receiving just 72% of the typical summer precipitation by mid-August.

The most affected areas have been central and southern England and much of Wales, where rainfall levels dropped as low as 59% of the long-term seasonal average. Scotland fared slightly better, with some regions seeing closer to average rainfall. The Met Office attributes the prolonged dry period to persistent high-pressure systems that deflected rain-bearing weather fronts away from the UK.

The impact of drought on agriculture

The drought’s impact has been widely felt across agriculture, water resources, and ecosystems. Supermarket chain Waitrose reported that the autumn harvest began nearly two weeks early due to heat stress on crops, while some vegetable yields, including broccoli, have declined by more than 50%. Water usage restrictions have been introduced in parts of England in the form of hosepipe bans, and farmers have raised concerns about long-term soil degradation and crop viability if dry conditions persist into the autumn.

Although summer 2025 has not yet officially surpassed the infamous 1976 drought, which remains the benchmark for extreme dry weather in the UK, the Met Office and other climate analysts note that 2025 is likely to be remembered as one of the most impactful in recent memory. The combination of unusually low rainfall, sustained high temperatures, and repeated heatwaves, four in total, has created conditions of widespread water stress.

Government action needed on water conservation

The likelihood of continued drought remains high. Without significant rainfall in September, long-term water reserves and groundwater levels may not recover adequately before winter. The Met Office has urged both government bodies and the public to conserve water and prepare for the potential of extended drought into the later months of the year.

In conclusion, this summer has not only tested the UK’s agricultural resilience but has also highlighted growing concerns around climate volatility. With droughts expected to become more frequent and intense due to climate change, the events of this summer serve as a stark warning for the need to prepare for the future.