So Who Actually Asks for Proof of Address?
Even if Companies House doesn’t automatically collect your documents, you’ll run into proof of address checks elsewhere. Banks always ask. Accounting firms, company formation agents, and mail-handling providers are regulated for anti-money laundering (AML) and will verify both identity and address. If you use a registered office service, expect them to request proof before they let you put their address on the public record.
What Counts as Proof of Address (And What Doesn’t)
Acceptable documents follow a pretty consistent pattern across UK banks and regulated service providers. Commonly accepted items include: a bank or building society statement, credit card statement, council tax bill, utility bill (gas, electricity, water, landline or broadband), mortgage statement, tenancy agreement, or an official letter from a UK government body (for example, HMRC correspondence). For most of these, the document must show your name and address clearly and be recent—usually dated within the last three months. Council tax and mortgage statements are often accepted up to 12 months.
Which One Is Right for You?
Start with your goals. If you want maximum choice, conventional financing, and a house that blends seamlessly into any neighborhood, modular is a strong fit. It gives you factory-built speed with local-code legitimacy and the potential for higher-end finishes and complex plans. If your top priority is the most home for the least money, and you are comfortable with standardized layouts and the HUD framework, a manufactured home can deliver a solid, livable space quickly.
What to order, and what reviewers actually mean
The menu is familiar, but the details matter, and reviewers translate that. If you keep seeing “pecan waffle, perfect,” assume they’re nailing the golden, slightly crisp exterior while keeping the center tender. Mentions of “eggs over medium, spot on” are surprisingly meaningful—hit-or-miss eggs can reveal how attentive the cook is to temperature and timing. The All-Star Special shows up in reviews for a reason: it’s the greatest-hits plate that exposes any weak link. If folks say every element arrived hot, seasoned, and in sync, the kitchen runs a tight ship.
Service, vibe, and the unwritten rules
Half the Waffle House magic lives in the vibe: the banter at the counter, orders called by shorthand, and that comforting clang of plates. Reviews often reveal whether a crew clicks. Mentions of teamwork—server calling “mark two waffles,” cook responding immediately, plates landing hot together—tell you they’re in sync. Friendly matters too. “They remembered my name by the second refill” is the kind of warmth that turns a quick stop into a bright spot in your day. When reviewers talk about the staff treating regulars and travelers with the same energy, that’s hospitality you can count on.
A House Of Dynamite, In 2026, Is Not What You Think
If you came for wall-to-wall fireworks, here is your first pleasant surprise: A House of Dynamite is not an explosion reel; it is a pressure cooker. The title is a dare, and the film mostly cashes it in with nerve-shredding restraint rather than spectacle. In a year when thrillers keep trying to out-shock each other, this one goes smaller and meaner, using a single location and a handful of combustible personalities to keep you glued to the screen. Think of it as a live grenade passed around a dining table. The fuse is set in the opening minutes, the rules are simple enough to understand, and from there the movie turns the screws with almost mischievous patience. That tension, not pyrotechnics, is the real blast. It is the kind of thriller that makes you sit a little straighter without realizing it, because every click, every glance, every whispered accusation might be the thing that finally sets the whole house off.