The Scotsman

Midlothian couple left £11,000 out of pocket after home insulation scam

- Rachel Amery Political Correspond­ent

A Midlothian couple have lost out on almost £11,000 after falling victim to a home insulation scam.

Fiona Barton, 60, and her husband Andre had spray foam insulation fitted into their loft in Newtongran­ge in a bid to bring down their energy bills.

However, Mrs Barton said her “world fell apart” when she was told she couldn’t sell her home because of the insulation, and had to pay a further £6,000 to have the foam profession­ally removed.

Trading Standards Scotland is urging people to always say no to cold callers offering to insulate their homes, as these types of scams have increased by 42 per cent in the past year.

Mrs Barton had the spray foam insulation installed in December 2022 after being contacted by scammers who “sounded very profession­al and believable”.

She said: “We’ve been coldcalled in the past, with people phoning us to say, ‘The government can give you a free survey of your loft’. So when they said, ‘We can check your loft out’, I assumed it was a similar sort of scenario.

“They came and said our loft was very, very damp and that they had ways and means of improving it. They sounded very profession­al and believable, otherwise we wouldn’t have gone ahead with it.”

Mrs Barton said the scammers then “spun the story” that their loft was not adequate. She said: “Spray foam insulation was something I’d never heard of before and they trapped us by our non-knowledge of the product.

“I did a quick search for the company’s website and the reviews were all five stars – but what I didn’t do was a search on spray foam insulation, because then I would’ve realised this wasn’t a great thing.”

The scam became clear when Mrs Barton decided to sell the house and the home report pointed out the problem.

“The surveyor said that having spray foam insulation meant that anyone trying to buy the house wouldn’t be able to get a mortgage,” Mrs Barton said. “That was when my world fell apart, because we’d already bought our next house and we had to sell in order to move.”

The couple have since managed to successful­ly get the faulty insulation removed and were able to move into their new home – but are now almost £11,000 out of pocket.

They are hoping to recover both the original cost of installing the foam and the removal costs, but their claim is still ongoing a year later. Figures from Trading Standards Scotland show 158 people complained about insulation scams last year, compared to just 111 in 2022 and 66 in 2021. Collective­ly homeowners have lost £500,000 to insulation scams in the past year, with an average cost per consumer of between £4,000 and £8,000. Trading Standards are now telling people to not engage with cold callers, and consult regulated mortgage advisers before having any spray foam insulation installed.

Another customer in North Lanarkshir­e is also thousands of pounds out of pocket, after paying £9,000 to have insulation installed in January last year. It was installed incorrectl­y, blocking the ventilatio­n points, and cost £10,000 to have it removed.

 ?? ?? Fiona Barton and her husband Andre lost £11,000 on a home insulation scam. Right, traditiona­l insulation is much better than the spray foam version, which can cause huge problems with mortgages.
Fiona Barton and her husband Andre lost £11,000 on a home insulation scam. Right, traditiona­l insulation is much better than the spray foam version, which can cause huge problems with mortgages.
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