When you decide to extend, renovate or build a home from scratch, you are not just buying drawings. You are building a small company around your project.
Architect, structural engineer, quantity surveyor, contractors, specialist consultants – each one adds value, but only if they are brought in at the right time, on the right terms, and aligned with a clear brief.
We recently sat down with Heather Campbell, Deputy Editor at SelfBuild, to talk about what professional fees actually buy you on a self-build or major renovation in the UK. This article distils that conversation so you can watch the video and read this side by side.
At RISE Design Studio, we see every project as a chance to create a low-energy, future-proofed home that supports the way you want to live. Fees are part of that journey – not the whole story, but a powerful lever for getting the result you want.
Professional fees explained by Sean Ronnie Hill, architect and founder of RISE Design Studio, in an exclusive SelfBuild interview on budgeting, risk and building with clarity.
Before we talk about percentages or contracts, we start somewhere else:
What are you trying to change in your life?
How do you want the house to feel in ten years?
What is your realistic total budget, including VAT, fees and contingency?
A clear brief is not a luxury. It is risk management.
When we align aspirations, budget and sustainability goals early, fee discussions become simpler. You are no longer negotiating over a number in isolation. You are choosing the level of thinking, care and stewardship you want around your investment.
A typical pattern we see:
Modest extension or loft: construction budget in the low hundreds of thousands.
Whole-house renovation or deep retrofit: mid to high hundreds of thousands.
New self-build homes: from around £500k and up.
As those budgets rise, fee percentages usually fall, but the absolute level of responsibility increases. You are asking a professional team to help you shape a one-off asset that will influence your comfort, health and financial resilience for decades.
Treat the early stages as a strategic phase, not just “getting drawings for planning”.
On most self-build and major renovation projects, three professional roles appear again and again:
Architect
Structural Engineer (SE)
Quantity Surveyor (QS)
They are not interchangeable. Each sees your project from a different angle.
Architect
Architects usually come in first, around the equivalent of RIBA Stages 0–1, and can stay with you all the way to handover if you want a full service.
As a broad guide on residential work in the UK:
For extensions, basements and lofts, a full architectural service often sits somewhere around the low-teens percentage of the construction cost.
For new houses at higher construction budgets, that percentage may drop into single digits.
For listed or highly complex buildings, it can be higher, reflecting the extra time, care and coordination required.
These are not fixed tariffs – there are no standard architect fees in the UK. They are simply benchmarks that help frame the conversation.
You can also appoint an architect for only part of the journey:
Planning-only services might be around one third of what a full journey would cost.
“Plans-only” up to the end of technical design might sit at roughly two thirds of a full service.
Structural Engineer
We like to bring the engineer into the conversation from concept design onwards (roughly Stage 2–3 equivalent).
They help us answer questions such as:
Can we safely open up this existing structure the way we imagine?
How do we support that generous opening to the garden?
What is the smartest way to handle foundations or basements on this site?
For many domestic projects, structural engineering fees might sit somewhere in the low single-digit percentages of construction cost, depending on scope. Small jobs may instead be priced as a fixed sum for calculations, drawings and site visits.
Quantity Surveyor (QS)
A good QS is your financial translator. We like to involve them from early design stages, not as the last voice you hear before tender.
Their role might include:
Early elemental cost plans so you know if the dream and the budget match.
Cost checks at design milestones.
Tender estimates and comparisons.
Ongoing cost control and contract administration during construction.
If they stay with you from concept through to completion, their overall fee might sit somewhere in the low-to-mid single-digit percentages of construction cost, with smaller tasks priced as fixed sums.
The pattern is simple:
Architect leads the design and coordination.
Engineer secures the bones of the building.
QS keeps ambition, scope and cost aligned.
When all three talk to each other early, you save far more than you spend.
Alongside the core design team, certain projects demand specialist insight depending on planning authority requirements, site constraints, environmental conditions or the ambitions of the client. These specialists help de-risk decisions, strengthen applications and ensure the design has the technical and ecological depth a modern home requires. Depending on the site and scope, you may also need:
Daylight Sunlight Specialist
Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) Consultant
Fire Safety Consultant
Landscape Architect
Sustainable Urban Drainage (SUDS) Consultant
Arboricultural Consultant
CGI Consultant
Building Control / Registered Building Control Approver (RBCA)
Party Wall Surveyor
Insurance Brokers
Ecology Consultant
Flood Risk Consultant
PHPP Consultant (for Passivhaus or EnerPHit projects)
Underground Utility Survey
We manage these appointments strategically. Not every project requires every specialist, but the right expertise at the right moment protects the programme, strengthens planning outcomes and helps build sustainably with confidence.
Fee structures are tools. The art lies in choosing the right tool for the right phase.
In broad terms, we work with three main models.
Fixed (lump-sum) fees
Best when the scope is tightly defined.
Clear deliverables.
Clear programme.
Little ambiguity in what is being asked.
If you change the brief significantly or add new tasks, the fee is revisited. Fixed does not mean infinite.
Percentage-based fees
Helpful when the scope is likely to evolve and the construction cost is a meaningful measure of complexity.
The fee flexes if the construction cost moves.
Payments are often tied to project stages.
It aligns the architect’s responsibility with the scale of what is built.
At RISE, we often only adjust the percentage fee if the cost estimate shifts significantly (for example, more than 10%), so small fluctuations do not create constant admin.
Time-charge fees
Powerful when certainty is low.
Early feasibility studies where the outcome is still open.
Stage 5 construction services, where the amount of time required can depend heavily on the contractor, site conditions and how much change happens on the way.
Time-charge can still be controlled. Agree hourly rates, agree a cap, keep timesheets transparent.
Expenses and disbursements
Beyond professional time, most teams charge:
Expenses → travel, printing, specialist couriers.
Disbursements → third-party costs such as planning application fees or specialist reports, usually passed on at net cost.
Understanding these models lets you choose consciously:
Fixed → when you know exactly what you want.
Percentage → when the project will grow and refine over time.
Time-charge → when you need exploration or extra care on site.
In residential work, many of the most painful stories start with a missing or vague appointment.
A good appointment does not kill flexibility. It creates a shared understanding.
For domestic UK projects, we often work with homeowner-focused professional services contracts which:
Describe the scope and stages of service.
Set out fees, payment terms and what is excluded.
Explain how changes are handled.
Confirm dispute resolution routes.
Make clear who is responsible for what.
Additional layers of scope – interior design, joinery, landscape, low-energy consultancy – are then added as supplementary services with their own fee lines, often adding a small percentage each if you want them fully designed and detailed.
Think of it this way:
Your build contract manages risk with your builder.
Your professional appointments manage risk with your team.
Both are cheap compared with fixing misunderstandings halfway through construction.
Professional Indemnity (PI) insurance is not a magic shield, but it is a sign of seriousness.
You are entitled to ask:
What is the current PI limit?
Are there any exclusions relevant to my project (for example, certain cladding types or fire-related services)?
Is the policy in force for the full duration of the project?
PI is designed to respond to professional errors, omissions in design, or negligent advice that causes you financial loss.
Architects in the UK are also bound by their regulator’s code to act with integrity and to manage their competence. The paperwork is not just bureaucracy. It is part of the promise that your team stands behind their work.
For us at RISE, sustainable design is not a bolt-on. It is the framework we use to make your home resilient, comfortable and efficient.
That usually means thinking in three layers:
Fabric-first
Improve insulation and airtightness carefully, so the building envelope performs well.
Upgrade windows and doors thoughtfully, considering solar gain, shading and orientation.
Repair or replace roofs and walls to eliminate cold bridges where possible.
Efficient, low-carbon services
Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP) to move away from fossil fuel heating where appropriate.
Underfloor heating and well-zoned systems so you heat what you use.
Solar PV where roof form and orientation make sense.
Healthy, continuous ventilation with heat recovery (MVHR)
MVHR (Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery) is one of the most misunderstood pieces of the puzzle, so we explain it simply to our clients:
Stale, warm air is continuously extracted from “wet” rooms like kitchens and bathrooms.
Fresh air is drawn in from outside.
Inside the MVHR unit, a heat exchanger transfers warmth from the outgoing air to the incoming air.
The result:
Fresh, filtered air throughout the home.
Far less heat energy wasted through ventilation.
A quieter, more stable indoor environment, especially in airtight homes.
In a self-build or deep retrofit, MVHR is not about gadgetry. It is about comfort, health and efficiency working together.
These systems add design time and coordination. They may sit outside a basic architectural scope, attracting additional fees for detailed detailing and integration with other consultants. But they also shape how you will feel in the house every day.
Sustainable design is not just about lowering bills. It is about building a home that supports your wellbeing while asking less of the planet.
Two financial realities can surprise first-time self-builders.
VAT
New-build homes in the UK are typically zero-rated for VAT on the construction works.
Renovations and extensions to existing homes usually attract VAT on the build.
In both cases, professional fees from architects, engineers, QS and most consultants attract VAT.
In other words: even if your build is zero-rated, your team’s invoices will not be.
Contingency
Every project carries uncertainty.
Ground conditions.
Existing structure in older buildings.
Client-driven changes as the design becomes more real.
Holding a 10–15% contingency on top of the construction budget is not pessimistic. It is disciplined.
Used well, contingency becomes a strategic fund. You can:
Release parts of it when risks disappear.
Use it to upgrade key elements when you know the build is tracking well.
Ignoring VAT and contingency does not make them go away. It just means meeting them unprepared.
We often say to our self-build clients: for the length of this project, you are running a small development company focused on a single, deeply personal asset.
You do not need to think like a volume housebuilder. But you can borrow a few habits:
Align design, structure and cost early
Architect, SE and QS in the same conversation from the start.
Insist on proper drawings and specifications
Do not tender from sketches if you want reliable prices and fewer disputes.
Use real contracts with your builder
Forms like JCT Homeowner can give both sides clarity around time, cost and quality.
Manage change consciously
Even a simple one-page change note with scope, cost and programme impact written down is better than “We’ll figure it out later”.
Choose the right level of service
Maybe you want full architectural support through construction. Maybe you want the architect to step back at tender and bring them in only as needed. Both can work if the roles and fees are clear.
The goal is not to spend as little as possible. The goal is to spend wisely, with clarity and control.
A self-build or major renovation will likely be one of the most significant investments you make.
Professional fees are the lens through which that investment is imagined, tested and safeguarded.
The architect aligns space, light, sustainability and daily life.
The engineer secures the bones of your ambition.
The QS keeps your money working in the right places.
Contracts and PI put structure around trust.
Low-energy strategies like fabric-first design, ASHP, Solar PV and MVHR turn your house into a comfortable, resilient machine for living.
In the video interview with SelfBuild, we talk through these themes in more detail. Watch it alongside this article, pause where you need to, and use it as a checklist for conversations with your own team.
If you are about to start your own project and want to explore how to build calmly, sustainably and with purpose, we would be happy to talk.
A well-designed home is not an accident. It is the result of clear intention, the right support, and a willingness to treat your project like it matters – because it does.
At RISE, we see every self-build, renovation or deep retrofit as more than a project. It is a commitment to craft, to comfort, and to the long future of the home you’re shaping. When you invest in the right team, set clear intentions, and build with a fabric-first mindset, the process becomes calmer, the decisions sharper, and the result far more resilient.
A well-designed home doesn’t happen by luck. It happens when design, structure, cost and sustainability rise together with purpose.
Thinking about starting your own project?
Let’s explore how we can help you build with confidence, precision and meaning.
→ Email us at architects@risedesignstudio.co.uk
→ Or call the studio on 020 3947 5886
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