For years, spray foam insulation was sold to UK homeowners as a miracle upgrade: warmer lofts, lower bills, airtight roofs and quick installation.

But in the last few years, the mood has completely changed.

Banks have started refusing mortgages on homes with spray foam. Surveyors are red-flagging roofs. Equity release is being declined. And thousands of homeowners are discovering that the product they were told would “add value” is now stopping them from selling, remortgaging or releasing equity.

This guide explains, in plain English, why lenders are taking such a hard line on spray foam — and what homeowners can realistically do about it.

1. What Changed? How Spray Foam Became a Lending Problem

For a long time, spray foam sat in a grey area. Some lenders accepted it, some didn’t, and many made individual decisions based on surveyor comments.

That changed when:

  • surveyors’ professional bodies tightened their guidance on foam-insulated roofs
  • major lenders started seeing serious roof issues hidden behind spray foam
  • equity-release providers reported increasing numbers of structural concerns
  • claims relating to moisture damage and timber decay began to rise
  • repossessed homes revealed unseen problems where spray foam had been used

From a bank’s perspective, the pattern was simple:

Spray foam made roofs harder to inspect, harder to value and more expensive to fix if something went wrong.

So lenders took the easiest route: move to a strict “no spray foam” position and decline homes where it’s present.

2. Why Lenders See Spray Foam as a Structural Risk

Most homeowners think lenders are worried about the insulation itself. In reality, the concern is much more fundamental:

Banks are worried about the roof structure they can no longer see.

Spray foam doesn’t just sit between rafters. In many roofs, it’s bonded directly to the rafters, tiles and underlay. That creates several issues for surveyors and lenders:

A. It Hides the Condition of the Timbers

Surveyors rely on visual inspection. They need to see rafters, trusses and wall plates to form an opinion on the roof’s condition.

When foam is sprayed over everything, those structural elements disappear from view. If there is rot, cracking or previous water damage behind the foam, the surveyor simply can’t see it — and has to assume the worst.

B. It Can Trap Moisture

Most traditional UK roof designs rely on air movement from the eaves to the ridge. That constant trickle of air helps to remove moisture before it can build up.

Spary foam often seals up eaves, valleys and gaps. When moisture does get into the roof space, it has nowhere to go. Over time, that can lead to condensation, damp patches and slow timber decay — all issues lenders are keen to avoid.

C. UK Roofs Weren’t Designed to Be Sealed This Way

Spray foam insulation can have a place in certain building types and climates, usually where roofs are designed for it from day one. Most British homes are not built like that.

Older UK properties typically have:

  • non-breathable felt or no felt at all
  • timbers that are already decades old
  • eaves ventilation that is essential to the way the roof manages moisture

Combine a cold, wet climate with a sealed roof void and you have the potential for problems. From a lender’s viewpoint, that potential is enough.

D. Removal Can Reveal Hidden Damage

When spray foam is removed properly, it sometimes exposes issues that were previously covered:

  • cracked or undersized rafters
  • damp staining and previous leaks
  • failed or perished underlay
  • areas where the roof has been overloaded or altered

Banks and building societies dislike uncertainty. Spray foam adds uncertainty to one of the most important structural parts of the home: the roof.

3. The Bank’s Perspective: “If We Can’t Verify the Roof, We Can’t Lend.”

Strip away the technicalities and the lender’s position is straightforward:

From a lender’s point of view:
• The mortgage is secured against the structure of the property.
• The roof is a key structural element.
• If the roof structure cannot be inspected, the security is questionable.
• If the security is questionable, they will not lend.

This is why so many UK lenders now have clear “no spray foam” policies. In practice, that includes most high street banks, building societies, buy-to-let lenders and equity-release providers.

Some will state that spray foam must be fully removed. Others simply decline any property where it’s present. In either scenario, homeowners end up with the same reality: no mortgage until the foam is gone.

4. The Homeowner Reality in 2025

Across the UK, homeowners with spray foam in their lofts are experiencing similar problems:

  • sales collapsing after the buyer’s survey
  • mortgage offers being withdrawn at the last minute
  • equity-release applications declined
  • remortgage deals refused or heavily delayed
  • properties being down-valued because of spray foam
  • surveyors marking spray foam as a Category 3 (serious) defect

Many people are understandably shocked, especially when they were told at the point of installation that spray foam would be a “modern, premium upgrade” and that “banks are fine with it”. That may have been the case once. It is not the case now.

5. Does All Spray Foam Cause Problems?

Technically, not every spray foam installation leads to damp or structural damage. Some roofs cope for years without obvious issues.

But that isn’t how lenders look at it.

From a bank’s perspective, the question is not, “Is this individual roof okay today?” It’s, “Can we see the structure clearly and be confident about the long-term risk?”

Because spray foam hides the structure and changes how the roof behaves, lenders have chosen to treat all foam-insulated roofs as high risk, regardless of whether the foam is open-cell or closed-cell, and regardless of installer guarantees.

6. The Only Reliable Way to Fix the Lending Problem

There are many suggestions online about ways to “get around” spray foam issues: partial removal, lender letters, extra surveys, and so on.

In reality, the only consistently successful route is much clearer:

Full spray foam removal and reinstatement of a traditional, ventilated loft system.

That means:

  • removing all foam from rafters and timbers
  • restoring clear ventilation paths to the eaves
  • ensuring rafters, felt and fixings can be properly inspected
  • installing modern, lender-friendly insulation such as Knauf or Hybris
  • providing evidence (photos and documentation) for surveyors and lenders

Once the roof is back to a conventional, inspectable condition, mortgage lending usually returns to normal.

7. What Reputable Spray Foam Removal Involves

A good spray foam removal service should do far more than simply “rip the foam out”. In most cases, the process includes:

  • a detailed loft survey to understand the type and depth of foam used
  • careful mechanical removal of foam from rafters and other structural elements
  • assessment of the underlying timbers and roof coverings
  • reinstatement of ventilation to match the roof type and age
  • installation of appropriate, lender-friendly insulation (usually Knauf mineral wool at joist level, Hybris at rafter level in suitable roofs, or a combination)
  • a photographic record of before, during and after works
  • documentation you can share with surveyors, lenders and buyers

Our dedicated spray foam removal team works to that standard across the UK, reinstating roofs so lenders can sign them off with confidence.

8. Spray Foam vs Traditional Loft Insulation: The Lender’s View

From a homeowner’s perspective, spray foam and traditional insulation might both look like ways to “keep heat in the house”. From a lender’s perspective, they are very different.

Feature / Concern Spray Foam Insulation Traditional Loft Insulation (Knauf / Hybris)
Mortgage approval Frequently declined where foam is present Fully accepted by lenders and surveyors
Roof visibility Rafters and timbers hidden behind foam Full visibility of rafters, timbers and fixings
Surveyor classification Often marked as a Category 3 (serious) defect No defect category when installed correctly
Ventilation Frequently sealed or obstructed Designed around clear airflow and eaves ventilation
Moisture risk Higher if eaves and gaps are sealed Low when installed with proper ventilation
Timber inspection Impossible without full removal Easy to inspect at any time
Lender requirements Removal almost always required before lending No special requirements or conditions
Insurance & warranty disputes More likely where foam hides issues Standard and widely understood construction
Impact on selling Often makes the property unmortgageable No negative impact on sales or valuations
Cost to resolve Full removal plus reinstatement required No remedial work needed

9. What UK Homeowners Commonly Experience When Spray Foam Is Present

The practical impact of spray foam on selling and remortgaging is often the most painful part for homeowners. These are the scenarios we see across the UK every week:

1

Mortgage Offer Withdrawn

Buyers receive an offer in principle, only to lose it once the surveyor flags spray foam in the roof.

2

Down-Valuation

Properties are down-valued, sometimes by tens of thousands, to reflect the cost and risk of removing spray foam.

3

Equity Release Declined

Equity-release providers frequently refuse applications outright if the loft has been treated with spray foam.

4

Buyer Pull-Outs

Estate agents report growing numbers of buyers walking away as soon as spray foam is mentioned in the survey.

5

Category 3 Defect

Surveyors increasingly classify spray foam as a Category 3 (serious) defect, prompting lenders to decline lending.

10. FAQs: Spray Foam and Mortgage Lending in the UK

Why are UK banks refusing homes with spray foam?
Because surveyors cannot properly inspect the roof structure when it is covered in foam. If they cannot verify the condition of the timbers, lenders see the roof as a structural risk and decline the mortgage.
Does it matter if it’s open-cell or closed-cell foam?
In practice, no. Lenders treat all spray foam in residential roofs as high risk. The core issue for them is hidden structure and altered ventilation, not the exact foam chemistry.
Will any UK lender accept spray foam in 2025?
A few lenders claim to consider foam on a case-by-case basis, but in reality most applications are declined unless the foam is removed and the roof reinstated in a traditional way.
Can I still sell my house if it has spray foam?
You can, but most buyers will struggle to get a mortgage. That usually limits you to cash buyers, who often negotiate heavily on price to reflect the cost and risk of removal.
Do I need full removal, or can it just be cut back?
Lenders and surveyors want full visibility of all structural timbers. Partial removal rarely satisfies that requirement. Full removal and reinstatement is the only solution that consistently restores lending options.
How long does spray foam removal take?
Most domestic roofs take between one and three days to remove foam, depending on the size of the loft, depth of foam and how complex the roof structure is once work begins.
What happens after the foam is removed?
Ventilation is reinstated, timbers are checked, and modern, lender-friendly insulation such as Knauf mineral wool or Hybris is installed so the roof performs well and can be inspected in future.
Will the bank approve the mortgage once removal is done?
Once foam has been fully removed, the roof reinstated correctly and evidence provided, most lenders are happy to proceed, and surveyors no longer mark the roof as a defect.
Does spray foam removal damage the roof?
A reputable removal team uses controlled methods to protect rafters and underlay. Where damage is uncovered, it is usually pre-existing and was simply hidden by the foam.
Can I claim against the original installer?
In some cases, yes — but many installers have ceased trading, changed names or excluded lending-related issues from their guarantees. Each case needs to be assessed individually.

11. What to Do if Your Home Has Spray Foam

If you’ve been told your home is unmortgageable because of spray foam, you’re not alone — and you’re not stuck.

The key steps are:

  • get a proper survey of the loft from a team experienced in spray foam removal
  • plan full removal and reinstatement, not quick fixes or shortcuts
  • ensure the roof is brought back to a traditional, ventilated, inspectable condition
  • keep all documentation and photographs to share with surveyors and lenders

Once that work is complete, most of the lending barriers disappear. The property can be valued correctly, buyers can get mortgages again, and equity-release or remortgage options reopen.

If you’d like us to assess your property and talk you through your options, our dedicated spray foam removal team operates across the UK.

Related reading:
learn more about
our spray foam removal process,
how we reinstate roofs with Knauf loft insulation and
Hybris hybrid systems,
and how to tackle winter loft condensation once your roof is back to a traditional system.