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How to Report Disrepair Properly: Emails, Photos, and Keeping a Repair Log

February 11, 20262 min read

When your home has damp, mould, leaks, broken heating, or unsafe electrics, the biggest mistake you can make is reporting it casually (a quick call, a hallway chat, a WhatsApp with no details) and hoping it’ll sort itself out.

If you report disrepair properly, you create a clear paper trail. That matters because 1.3m households in England were living in damp homes in 2023–2024 — and landlords and repair teams are busy, so the squeaky wheel (with evidence) gets attention.

Step 1: Send 1 clear email (and keep it simple)

Email is your best friend because it’s dated, searchable, and easy to forward later.

Include:

  • What the issue is (be specific: “leak under kitchen sink”, not “plumbing problem”)

  • When it started (or when you noticed it)

  • What damage it’s causing (walls, flooring, belongings)

  • Any health impact (e.g., asthma, coughing, headaches)

  • What you want: inspection date + repair date

A simple structure:

  • Subject: Urgent repair needed – [your address] – [issue]

  • Body: 5–8 lines, bullet points, and “Please confirm when this will be inspected and repaired.”

If you’re in social housing and it’s serious (like significant damp/mould or electrics), being clear and prompt is even more important.

Step 2: Take photos like you’re building a case (because you are)

Do this straight away:

  • Wide shot (shows location in the room)

  • Close-up (shows the detail: mould, crack, leak, damage)

  • A repeat photo every 7 days if it’s ongoing (shows it’s getting worse)

Top tip: turn on date/time stamps if your phone allows, or keep the photos in a folder named by date.

Step 3: Keep a repair log (it’s boring, but it works)

A repair log is just a timeline. Use Notes, Google Sheets, or a notebook — anything you’ll actually keep up.

Record:

  • Date you noticed it

  • Date you reported it + how (email, portal, call)

  • Who you spoke to

  • What they promised

  • Missed appointments

  • Any updates (or silence)

Claim First’s housing disrepair process is built around clear details and supporting evidence (especially photos), so this makes everything smoother if you decide to escalate.

Step 4: Don’t give them an “access excuse”

If repairs are booked, let them in (or rearrange in writing). If you can’t do the date offered, reply with 2 alternatives. Missed access is one of the easiest ways for landlords to delay things.

Ready to stop chasing?

If you’ve reported disrepair properly, kept photos, and logged what’s happened — but your landlord is still dragging their feet — you don’t have to deal with it alone. Claim First can help you understand your options and, where you’re eligible, take action to enforce repairs and seek compensation (often £1,000s depending on the situation).


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Mark Blundell

Building smooth, compliant case pipelines for litigation firms by combining lead generation, legal technology, and complete end-to-end case solutions.

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Claim First is a trading style of M G Financial Limited, a limited company registered in England and Wales with company number 06547196. M G Financial Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority FRN Number 832131. Claim First is registered with the Information Commissioner’s Office under registration number ZB915334.