At a glance
Knuckle-rap your wall before you buy anything. That single action tells you more than ten minutes of googling, because the two types of wall you find in UK homes need completely different approaches, and using the wrong one is the reason most wall repairs fail. A hollow sound means plasterboard on a timber or metal stud frame. A solid, dense sound means masonry wall with a plaster finish. Get this right and the rest follows. Get it wrong and you spend money on filler that falls out, or buy bonding plaster for a plasterboard wall that has no substrate for it to key into.
In most UK homes built after the 1970s, internal partition walls are plasterboard. Older properties, particularly exterior walls and walls between semi-detached houses, are typically brick or block with a two-coat plaster finish over the top. Both can be patched to invisibility, but the technique and materials differ enough that treating them the same produces a result that looks permanently like someone had a go at fixing it and gave up halfway through.
What you’ll need
What your wall is actually made of
The tap test handles most situations. Where it does not give a clear answer, push a thin nail into the wall. If it goes straight through with minimal resistance into a void, that is plasterboard. If it meets solid resistance about 15-20mm in, that is render on masonry. If it hits something hard immediately at the surface, the plaster coat is thin on brick and you should treat it like a solid wall throughout.
Plasterboard panels in UK homes are almost always 12.5mm thick on walls. The board is a gypsum core with paper facing on both sides. When a hole is punched through, there is nothing behind it except the void inside the wall. This matters because filler needs something to bond to, and in a large hole there is nothing there. Small holes under about 25mm can be filled directly because the surrounding board gives the filler enough purchase to grip. Medium and large holes need a backing structure before any filler goes on.
Solid plaster walls have more depth to work with. A traditional two-coat finish runs to around 15-20mm total: a rougher undercoat bonded to the masonry, then a smooth finish coat on top. Deep holes need to be built back up in layers to match this. One thick coat cracks as it dries.
One thing before you cut anything
On plasterboard walls, always scan with a cable and stud detector before cutting. Electrical cables run horizontally and vertically through wall cavities, and most do not follow the neat zones that regulations require for new-build work. Running a pad saw or multi-tool through a live cable is a bad afternoon. A basic detector costs very little from any hardware shop and takes thirty seconds to use. Use it every time without exception.
Small holes: nail and screw fixings
The most common wall damage in UK homes is the rawlplug that came out with the fixing still in it, leaving an irregular hole with lifted paper around the edge. A filling knife pushed into the hole to press any raised edges flat, followed by lightweight ready-mix filler worked in firmly and left slightly proud, then sanded flush once fully dry, is the entire repair. Filler shrinks as it dries, which is why you apply more than you need. Once flat, the surface needs sealing before paint goes on, which the finishing section covers.
Clean the hole and flatten any raised edges
Remove loose material and press any lifted paper back flat with the edge of a filling knife. On solid plaster walls, lightly dampen the edges with a wet brush. Solid plaster draws moisture from filler too quickly and the surface cracks as it dries. Do not dampen plasterboard holes; the paper facing absorbs water and softens.
Apply filler slightly proud of the surface
Press filler firmly into the hole from different angles to avoid air pockets. Apply a little more than needed so the filler sits 1-2mm proud of the surrounding surface. Ready-mix filler shrinks as it dries. If you fill it flush, it will end up slightly sunken. For holes deeper than about 10mm, two coats are better than one.
Allow to dry fully before sanding
Ready-mix filler changes colour as it dries, from darker when wet to a uniform pale tone when fully cured. Sand only after that colour change is complete. Sanding damp filler compresses the surface without actually flattening it and can pull the filler out of the hole.
Sand flush using a sanding block
Use 120-180 grit sandpaper on a sanding block, not loose sandpaper in your hand. The block keeps the surface flat. Loose sandpaper wraps around any high spots and sands everything except what needs sanding. Feather the edges slightly so there is no ridge between filler and surrounding wall surface.
Medium holes in plasterboard
For holes in the 25-150mm range, the self-adhesive fibreglass mesh patch is the right tool. Press the mesh firmly over the clean hole with any lifted paper edges trimmed back first. Apply the first coat of jointing compound, working it through the mesh openings and out over the surrounding surface, then scrape off the excess. This coat will look sunken in the centre once dry, which is correct. Apply the second coat over a wider area, feathering the edges well beyond the mesh, and this coat brings the surface flush.
The mistake almost everyone makes is applying one thick coat of compound and wondering why it cracks. Compound cracks when applied thick because it shrinks unevenly as moisture leaves. Two thin coats feathered well beyond the mesh edges, with each coat fully dry before the next, produce a surface that sands flat without cracking and feels invisible under your hand. Whether you can see it depends entirely on what happens at the painting stage.
Large holes in plasterboard
For holes larger than about 150mm, or any hole where the damage is irregular with crumbling edges, the mesh patch alone is not adequate. The repair needs rigid backing. Two approaches work reliably.
The batten method is what I would use for any hole large enough to suggest something went through rather than fell out. Slide a length of timber batten into the cavity so it spans the hole, hold it and drive screws through the existing plasterboard into the batten from the front. One batten above and one below gives you fixing points. Cut a new plasterboard patch to fit the opening exactly, screw it to the battens, apply jointing tape along all four seams, and skim with compound in two thin coats. It is the most solid repair and invisibly so once painted.
The California patch requires no access behind the wall and no battens. Cut a piece of new plasterboard larger than the hole on all four sides. Score the back and snap off the gypsum core, leaving the paper facing intact with a 25mm overlap of paper on each edge. Cut the hole in the wall to a clean rectangle the same size as the gypsum core, apply jointing compound around the hole perimeter, and press the patch in with the paper flanges bonded flat against the surrounding wall. Once dry, tape the seams and skim over the whole repair. As solid as a batten repair on a correctly sized hole, and quicker on anything under about 300mm.
Solid plaster walls: depth matters
Patching solid plaster is less forgiving than plasterboard because the depth of the repair matters. Match the original surface level too high and you feel a lump. Match it too low and paint pools in the depression under a raking light. The wall type and the depth of the hole determine the approach.
The invisible finish
The patch is the easy part. Getting it invisible under paint is where most DIY wall repairs fall down, and the reason is almost always the same. Bare filler, whether on plasterboard or solid plaster, is highly porous and absorbs the first coat of emulsion faster than the surrounding painted wall. This leaves a dull, flat patch that stays visible regardless of how many topcoats go over it. The phenomenon is called flashing or grinning, and no amount of additional topcoats solves it once it has happened.
A torch held at a low angle is the most reliable quality check before painting. Hold it close to the wall surface, angled so the light rakes across the repaired area. Any ridge, hollow or edge casts a shadow that is invisible under overhead light. It takes thirty seconds and saves the frustration of discovering a visible repair after the topcoat is on.
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