What the RICS 2026 AI Professional Standard actually requires, and how to check if your tool meets it
The RICS 2026 AI Professional Standard requires three specific things from AI-assisted survey reports. Here is what they are, and the questions to ask your tool provider.
The RICS 2026 AI Professional Standard has been mandatory since 9 March 2026. Most surveyors who use AI tools know it exists. Fewer have checked whether their current tool fully meets it.
The standard is more specific than it might appear. Here is what it requires, in plain terms, for any AI-assisted home survey report.
Requirement one: a named-surveyor sign-off gate
An AI-assisted report cannot be released to a client until a named, RICS-qualified surveyor has explicitly accepted the AI output. The standard requires that the surveyor's name, RICS membership number, and the timestamp of sign-off are recorded. A general "reviewed by" checkbox is not sufficient. The acceptance must be named, membership-verified, and permanent.
This matters because "AI-assisted" is not the same as "AI-generated and checked." The gate exists to ensure that a qualified professional, with their professional standing on the line, has explicitly taken responsibility for the output before it reaches a client.
Requirement two: an immutable audit trail
The standard requires a tamper-evident record of what the AI generated and what the surveyor changed, field by field. Insert-only. It cannot be edited after sign-off. If a log can be amended, it does not meet the standard.
This is the requirement that most software discussions skip over. An audit log that can be corrected or deleted after the fact provides no meaningful accountability. The record needs to be frozen at the point of sign-off and defensible in any dispute.
Requirement three: an AI-disclosure statement in the client PDF
The client PDF must carry a statement of what AI assistance was used, which sections it generated, who signed off, and when. This is not a generic disclaimer at the bottom of the document. It must be specific to the report, sourced from the frozen audit trail, so that the disclosure and the record always agree.
A template disclosure block, one that says the same thing regardless of what the AI did, does not meet this requirement.
Three questions to ask your report tool provider
If you are not certain whether your current AI tool meets the standard, these are the questions worth asking:
- Is the sign-off gate tied to a named surveyor and their RICS membership number, or is it a general approval step?
- Is the audit trail insert-only and tamper-evident, or can it be edited after sign-off?
- Is the disclosure statement in the client PDF generated from the actual audit trail for that report, or is it a static template?
The answers should be specific. "We are working on it" or "we are compliant" without detail does not tell you whether the three requirements are met.
How Otto handles this
Otto, Home's AI-assisted report writer for surveyors, ships all three requirements as part of the standard report workflow.
Every report generated with AI assistance is blocked from release until the responsible surveyor signs off. Their name, RICS membership number, and timestamp are recorded in an insert-only audit log. The disclosure statement in the client PDF is generated directly from that frozen record, so the artifact and the record always agree.
All three requirements have been in production since 25 June 2026.
It is not a setting you turn on. It is how Otto works.
If you want to see how it works in practice, you can book a walkthrough at homemove.com/surveyors.
The RICS 2026 AI Professional Standard applies to all AI-assisted reports produced by RICS members and regulated firms. This post describes the standard's requirements as published. It is not legal or professional advice.
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