Revive Maintenance Reviews Explained: The Better Home Hub Dispute and What Homeowners Should Know
- 3 minutes ago
- 7 min read

If you've recently searched for reviews of Revive Maintenance Ltd (a UK based spray foam removal company), you may have landed on a confusing picture: warning notices on one set of websites, a separate "official brand protection" website pushing back, and at least four different domains all using some variation of the Revive name. None of which is straightforward to make sense of as a homeowner trying to decide who to trust with your property, and makes finding real Revive Maintenance reviews difficult.
Here is what is publicly available, what Companies House records actually show, and (perhaps more importantly) what this whole episode reveals about how a significant portion of the UK spray foam removal industry actually works.
What's Happened
In February 2026, a notice was published on revivemaintenance.co.uk and a near-identical version on sprayfoamremovaladvice.co.uk, both under the name Better Home Hub Ltd. The notices state that Better Home Hub Ltd has ended its working relationship with Revive Maintenance Ltd and advises customers to be cautious about dealing with the company. The reasons given are framed in general terms: concerns about service standards, customer communication, and business conduct, without specific public detail.
In response, a separate website at revivemaintenanceltd.co.uk has appeared, describing itself as an "official brand protection statement" and disputing the picture painted by Better Home Hub Ltd. That site directs visitors to sprayfoamremovalhelp.co.uk as the company's main operating website. A third domain, revive-maintenance.co.uk, also still exists, with broadly similar branding and content.
So you now have four separate domains, two trading names, and two companies, all in active public disagreement about who is who and which one homeowners should be talking to.
Disclaimer: Remove Spray Foam is not affiliated with Revive Maintenance Ltd or Better Home Hub Ltd. All information about each company in this article is drawn from publicly available sources, including Companies House records and statements published by each party on their own websites, accurate at the time of writing. We have not taken a position on the underlying commercial dispute between the two companies.
What Companies House Actually Shows
Setting the marketing aside, the registered facts are straightforward and worth reading carefully.
Revive Maintenance Ltd (Company No. 14503058) was incorporated on 23 November 2022, with its registered office in Arundel. The director is listed as Charlie Dixon. The company has been actively trading as a spray foam removal contractor for over three years, with reviews dating back to 2024 across Trustpilot and Checkatrade.
Better Home Hub Ltd (Company No. 16605946) was incorporated on 24 July 2025, just over nine months before this article was written. Its registered office is in Bury St Edmunds. Its filed nature of business is not building or insulation work, but instead business and domestic software development.
Two companies, then. One is a roughly three-and-a-half year old spray foam removal contractor in Sussex. The other is a nine-month-old software development company that operates a network of advice and lead-generation websites in the spray foam, insulation, mould, asbestos, roofing, and radon spaces.
The "Sister Sites" Question
One factual point in the dispute can be checked against an open public source.
The "official brand protection" site at revivemaintenanceltd.co.uk takes the position that the affiliation claim made on revivemaintenance.co.uk is not accurate. However, Better Home Hub Ltd's own website publishes a Sister Sites page that openly lists revivemaintenance.co.uk in its specialist advisory network, alongside sprayfoamremovaladvice.co.uk, nationalsprayfoamadvice.co.uk, and a number of other specialist domains across mould, asbestos, roofing, energy, and radon services.
The footer of revivemaintenance.co.uk itself also reads "© 2026 Better Home Hub Ltd. All rights reserved" and states clearly that the domain is owned and operated by Better Home Hub Ltd. So whatever the wider rights and wrongs of the commercial dispute, the specific question of who currently controls the revivemaintenance.co.uk domain appears to be settled by Better Home Hub Ltd's own published material.
That matters because it has direct practical implications for homeowners. If you Google "Revive Maintenance" and click on revivemaintenance.co.uk, you are not, based on what is publicly published, landing on a website operated by Revive Maintenance Ltd. You are landing on a website operated by Better Home Hub Ltd. That is true regardless of which side of the wider dispute you find more persuasive.
What This Reveals About How Spray Foam Removal Customers Are Actually Sourced
The structural picture this dispute exposes, almost incidentally, is more important than the specific commercial fallout between the two parties.
A significant portion of the UK spray foam removal market does not work the way most homeowners assume. Many of the websites that look, sound, and feel like specialist contractors (sites with phrases like "advice centre", "advisory network", "removal experts", or "approved specialists") are not, in fact, contractors. They are lead-generation businesses, typically built around clusters of related domains, that capture homeowner enquiries through Google search and Facebook advertising, then sell or pass those leads to actual removal companies.
Better Home Hub Ltd's published sister-sites page is, in effect, a textbook example of how this works at scale. The site openly describes a network of specialist advisory websites covering spray foam, mould, asbestos, roofing, radon, energy, lofts, driveways, and more, all routed through a central trading entity. Whether the specific company is operating well or badly is a separate question; the model itself is widespread, legal, and not unique to either party in this dispute.
One curious feature of the warning notices recently published by Better Home Hub Ltd is that they urge homeowners to be cautious about lead generation websites in the spray foam space. The recommendation, on its own merits, is one we would also make. But the warnings are coming from within a network of advisory and lead-generation sites. On any plain reading, that is a slightly unusual position from which to issue them.
The Brand-Confusion Problem
This whole episode also illustrates a quieter consumer problem that is going to keep cropping up as the spray foam market matures.
If a homeowner currently searches for "Revive Maintenance" online, they will encounter:
📍 revivemaintenance.co.uk: owned and operated by Better Home Hub Ltd, now used to publish a warning about Revive Maintenance Ltd 📍 revivemaintenanceltd.co.uk: operated by Revive Maintenance Ltd, used to dispute that warning 📍 revive-maintenance.co.uk: a third domain, with broadly similar branding 📍 sprayfoamremovalhelp.co.uk: described on revivemaintenanceltd.co.uk as Revive Maintenance Ltd's primary trading website 📍 sprayfoamremovaladvice.co.uk: operated by Better Home Hub Ltd, hosting a near-identical version of the warning
If you are a homeowner with spray foam in your loft, trying to work out who to ring, that is not a manageable amount of brand ambiguity. The scope for confusion, and for accidentally engaging with the wrong party, is exactly what makes the wider lead-generation model uncomfortable, regardless of how this particular dispute is eventually resolved.
What Homeowners Should Actually Take From All of This
Without taking a position on the underlying merits of either side's account, there are several practical takeaways from the episode that we'd recommend any homeowner internalise.
Always verify who you're actually contracting with. When you fill in a "free quote" form on any website, the company that appears on your eventual contract may not be the company whose website you filled it in on. Before paying anything (including a deposit), confirm the legal name of the company you are signing with, and look that name up directly on Companies House. If the trading name on the website does not match the company name on the contract, ask why before you sign.
Be cautious of "advisory" sites that aren't actually doing the work. A genuine specialist contractor will have its own established trading history, its own Companies House record, its own physical address, its own insurance details, and its own portfolio of completed jobs. None of that is true of a lead-generation site, which by design exists to put you in front of someone else.
Use the trusted independent registers, not advisory portals. The Property Care Association's "Find a Member" register and the recently launched register of trained spray foam surveyors are independently administered. They are not commercial lead-generation networks. They are a more reliable starting point than any "advisory centre" you encounter via a Google ad.
Treat warnings, including this one, with appropriate scepticism. Public warnings can be entirely accurate, partly accurate, or motivated by commercial fallout. The healthy default is to read them as one input, not as a verdict, and to verify the underlying facts independently before acting. We've tried to flag clearly which parts of this article are based on Companies House records or public sister-site listings (and therefore verifiable in a few clicks) versus which parts depend on either party's account of the relationship. The first category is much firmer ground than the second.
How Remove Spray Foam Is Different
We are deliberate about not operating in the way this episode highlights. Remove Spray Foam is the company that does the actual physical removal. We are not an advisory network. We are not a lead-generation business that sells your details to whichever contractor pays the most that week. The phone number you call is answered by the same team that turns up at your house with the equipment, completes the work, and signs the completion certificate.
That model is not unusual. There are many other genuine, single-trading-entity specialists in this market. It just tends to be the simpler, less confusing way to work. If you want to know who you're actually dealing with, ask the person on the phone for the legal company name and the Companies House number, then check it. We'll happily give you both. So will any other legitimate specialist.
If the PCA's latest findings about defective installations have prompted you to look into removal, or if this dispute has left you uncertain who to actually deal with, get in touch for a free, no-obligation quote. No upfront cash, no cold calls, and no marketing network in the middle.
Concerned about spray foam insulation in your home, or trying to make sense of a confusing market? Contact Remove Spray Foam today for honest, expert advice and a free consultation.
_edited.png)



Comments