Escalating to The Property Ombudsman

Independent consumer guide. Not affiliated with Fox & Sons or Connells Group. Not legal advice.

The Property Ombudsman (TPO) is the free, independent redress scheme that Fox & Sons publishes as its dispute resolution route for residential sales and lettings complaints. Estate agents in the UK are legally required to belong to an approved redress scheme — this is yours, and it costs you nothing.

When you can go to TPO

You can refer your complaint to TPO when either of these is true:

  • You have received the agent’s final viewpoint letter and you’re not satisfied, or
  • 8 weeks have passed since your formal written complaint and they still haven’t issued one.

You normally have 12 months from the final viewpoint letter to submit your case — but don’t sit on it. File while everything is fresh and documented.

How to file

  1. Go to www.tpos.co.uk and use the online complaint form (postal address at time of writing: The Property Ombudsman, Unit 159756, PO Box 7169, Poole BH15 9EL; phone 01722 333306 — check the website for current details).
  2. Upload your evidence: your complaint letters, their responses, the final viewpoint letter, and your dated timeline of events.
  3. State clearly what outcome you want — an apology, a correction, compensation, or all three.

What TPO can do

  • Investigate against the TPO Code of Practice, which sets higher standards than the bare legal minimum
  • Award compensation for financial loss and for avoidable aggravation, distress and inconvenience
  • Awards can reach up to £25,000 in appropriate cases
  • If you accept the decision, it becomes binding on the agent — they must comply

How to win at TPO

Ombudsman investigations are paper exercises. The case is won by the quality of your documentation, not the strength of your feelings:

  • Lead with a one-page dated timeline. Make the caseworker’s job easy.
  • Match each complaint point to evidence. “On [date] they stated X (email attached). On [date] they stated the opposite (email attached).”
  • Show you followed the process. Branch first, then corporate, then the 8-week rule.
  • Quantify your losses where you can — time, costs, consequences.

If your complaint involves your personal data — inaccurate records, false statements about you, or a mishandled Subject Access Request — that’s a separate track through the ICO. See our guides to the DSAR and ICO complaints: you can run both routes at the same time.