Purpose
RICS is a Royal Charter body — a unique regulatory arrangement where the profession regulates itself under privileges granted by the Crown and subject to oversight by the Privy Council. For a QS firm, understanding the governance hierarchy is essential: it identifies who sets the rules, who enforces them, and how regulatory decisions can be appealed.
The regulatory structure comprises the Royal Charter (granted 1881, last amended 2020), the Bye-Laws (February 2020), the RICS Regulations (January 2023 edition), the Rules of Conduct (October 2021, effective 2 February 2022), and the Sanctions Policy (2019), operated through three principal bodies: the Governing Council, the Management Board, and the independent Standards and Regulation Board (SRB).
Fluency in this hierarchy is also an APC expectation and a practical necessity: every firm registration, CPD return, complaint, or sanctions appeal depends on understanding where authority sits and how it flows.
Key Principles
- The RICS Royal Charter (1881, amended 2020) establishes RICS as a chartered body and defines its public benefit purpose. Charter amendments require Privy Council ratification.
- The Bye-Laws (February 2020) are secondary to the Charter and likewise require Privy Council approval to change. They set out governance roles, membership classes, and disciplinary powers.
- RICS Regulations (January 2023 edition) consolidate operational rules for membership, firm registration, CPD, fees, complaints, monitoring, and disciplinary procedures.
- Governing Council directs RICS's affairs and sets strategy. The Management Board is subordinate and accountable to Governing Council for day-to-day operations.
Reference: RICS Corporate Governance structure diagram — https://www.rics.org/about-rics/corporate-governance
- The Standards and Regulation Board (SRB) is independently led and has delegated authority for setting professional standards, regulating entry to the profession, operating the dispute resolution service, and assuring standards compliance.
- RICS-regulated Firms are separately regulated from individual members under the Rules for the Registration of Firms (2020). Each firm must have a named Responsible Principal (RP) accountable to RICS.
- The Sanctions Policy (2019) governs disciplinary outcomes — from recorded caution and fines to suspension and removal from the register. Appeals are confined to procedural and evidential grounds and must be lodged within 28 days.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Treating RICS as a trade body rather than a regulator — leads to under-preparation for Firm Regulation visits and avoidable sanctions.
- Missing the annual firm-renewal deadline — triggers firm suspension and a visible flag on the public RICS register.
- Failing to update Responsible Principal details when personnel change — RICS notices sent to a former RP are not legally ineffective, meaning the firm may miss critical deadlines.
- Under-recording CPD (below 20 hours per year, or below 10 formal hours) — triggers automatic review and, on repeat, sanctions.
- Assuming a sanctions appeal is routine — under the Sanctions Policy appeals are limited to procedural or evidential error and the 28-day time limit is strict.
- Overlooking that the Bye-Laws require Privy Council approval to change — legal advice on proposed structural changes should always consider this timeline.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
This topic is relevant to: Conduct Rules, Ethics and Professional Practice (Level 2–3, mandatory); Business Planning (Level 1–2); Accounting Principles and Procedures (Level 1).
Pre-Appointment Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Understand the Charter-Bye-Laws-Regulations-Rules hierarchy and the Privy Council's oversight role.
- Identify the three principal governance bodies (Governing Council, Management Board, SRB) and their respective functions.
- Apply the annual firm-renewal and CPD obligations to own practice and diarise key deadlines.
Further Reading
- RICS Royal Charter (granted 1881, as amended February 2020)
- RICS Bye-Laws (February 2020) — https://www.rics.org/content/dam/ricsglobal/documents/standards/rics_bye_laws_feb_2020.pdf
- RICS Regulations (January 2023 edition)
- RICS Rules of Conduct (October 2021, effective 2 February 2022) — https://www.rics.org/content/dam/ricsglobal/documents/standards/2021_roc_en.pdf
- RICS Sanctions Policy (2019)
- RICS Rules for the Registration of Firms (2020) — https://www.rics.org/content/dam/ricsglobal/documents/regulation/1_april_2020_firm_regulation_rules_for_the_registration_of_firms_wef.pdf
- RICS Corporate Governance (landing page + structure diagram) — https://www.rics.org/about-rics/corporate-governance
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