What to Look Out for When Buying a Coastal Property in South Devon

Holding out house keys on a house shaped keychain

South Devon has some of the most sought-after coastal properties in the country, and towns like Salcombe, Dartmouth and Teignmouth draw buyers for good reason. But coastal homes are prone to issues that inland properties just aren’t. Salt in the air, wind-driven rain off the Channel and constant wet-dry cycles all incrementally impact a coastal building over time.

Before you commit, it helps to know what the coastal weather has been doing to the house you are about to buy. Here are the issues we see most often across the South Devon coast and why they matter.

Salt corrosion on metal fixtures and fittings

Airborne salt speeds up corrosion on almost any metal fitted to the outside of a building. Railings, balcony balustrades, window hinges, gutter brackets and external lighting all suffer. So do the less visible items that actually hold parts of the house together, such as steel lintels above bay windows, wall ties inside cavity walls and fixings behind render or cladding.

It’s easy to fix surface rust on a balcony, for example, but the same cannot be said for a rusting lintel. As the steel expands, it can crack the masonry above the window, and by the time that shows up on the inside wall, you’re looking at a disruptive and expensive repair. During a viewing, keep an eye on painted metalwork for blistering, brown staining running down render, and horizontal cracks just above window heads.

Penetrating damp from wind-driven rain

Coastal homes face a form of damp that inland buyers rarely have to think about. When storms come in off the sea, rain is pushed sideways against exposed elevations with real force, and it finds any weak point in the render, pointing, or window seals.

This is different from rising damp, which comes up from the ground. Penetrating damp can appear at any height on the wall, including upstairs. If you want a more complete picture of how damp shows up in a survey, our guide covers it in more detail.

South and west-facing walls in places like Salcombe and Dawlish tend to take the worst of this kind of water exposure. Signs to look for include tide marks around window reveals, patches of blown or hollow-sounding render, crumbling mortar joints and internal staining on gable walls or in upstairs rooms. Cavity walls can also suffer on exposed coastal elevations, particularly where the cavity has been filled rather than left clear, as a saturated outer layer of brickwork can pass moisture across to the inside.

Timber decay in windows, fascias and hidden structure

Timber in a coastal property is almost always damper than it should be. Sash windows, fascia boards, bargeboards, soffits and external door thresholds all sit in the firing line, and wet rot takes hold where paint has failed or joints have opened up.

The bigger worry is the timber you cannot see. Older properties in Teignmouth, Dawlish and the harbour fronts of the South Hams often have structural timbers built directly into external walls. Large timber beams over old shop fronts, joist ends bedded into solid masonry and embedded lintels can all be quietly rotting away behind plaster while the outside of the house looks fine. These defects rarely become visible until a floor starts to sag or a window frame drops.

Spalling brickwork and failed render

Spalling is the flaking of the outer face of a brick, and it is a common problem seen in coastal properties. Salt crystals form inside the pores of the brick, then freeze-thaw cycles during winter cause the face to break away. It is particularly common on Victorian and Edwardian terraces along the seafronts of Torquay, Teignmouth and Dawlish.

A few spalled bricks may not look that concerning, but they usually point to a wider moisture problem in the wall. Repointing in hard modern cement mortar often makes things worse on a soft Victorian brick, because the brick becomes the weakest point and takes the damage instead of the joint. Cracked, bulging or patchily repointed brickwork all deserve a proper look.

Coastal erosion, in proportion

The subject of coastal erosion has been back in the news recently. A homeowner in Happisburgh, Norfolk is now facing the loss of her second home to the sea, and in January 2026 Storm Ingrid breached the railtrack wall at Sea Lawn Terrace in Dawlish, a stretch of coast that was also badly damaged in the storms of February 2014. The RICS covered the broader picture in its 2019 coastal erosion conundrum article, which is worth a read if the subject concerns you.

However, for the vast majority of people buying along the South Devon coast, erosion is not the main risk. It becomes a serious consideration only where a property sits directly above an active cliff or on a stretch of coastline covered by a managed retreat policy. If that applies to the house you are looking at, a detailed survey is essential and the findings should be read alongside the relevant Shoreline Management Plan, the local authority document that sets out how a stretch of coast will be managed over the coming decades.

Why a Level 3 Building Survey is the right call

The right survey depends on the property rather than the postcode, and our Which Survey? page sets out the differences in full. For older coastal homes, properties on exposed elevations, and any house showing the signs described above, a RICS Level 3 Building Survey is the more appropriate choice. It is a detailed inspection that looks into the causes of defects rather than just noting them, sets out what needs doing, and helps you plan the budget.

At h&s Surveyors, we have spent years working on properties right across the South Devon coast, from Dawlish terraces to hillside homes in Salcombe, and we know how the local housing stock behaves in its own conditions. If you are considering a coastal purchase and want a clear view of what you are taking on, get in touch for a quote.

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