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Letter to the Mayor on leasehold

Leasehold guide

Key information

Publication type: General

Publication date:

Contents

Leasehold tenure has been criticised for a number of reasons, largely due to onerous terms imposed in leases, such as high fees for ground rent, excessive permission fees to make changes to the property and arbitrary restrictions, such as the banning of pets.



Other controversies include excessive service charges, costs for major repairs and the burden imposed by forfeiture, where the leaseholder has breached the terms of a lease, which means the landlord can bring the lease to an end and acquire the property back without recompense to the leaseholder.

Many leaseholders, especially first-time buyers, are not aware of the difference between leasehold and freehold. Although leaseholders are owner-occupiers, they are still effectively tenants with a landlord, with rights and obligations set out by a lease document. Leasehold is a tenure unique to England and Wales, and attempts to reform it have not been successful: although the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002 introduced “commonhold” – a tenure that would be similar to those that exist in Scotland, Australia or the USA – its take-up has been limited to a few dozen new properties.



Transitioning away from leasehold to commonhold is the answer to resolving leaseholder dissatisfaction.



The London Assembly Housing Committee has written to the Mayor of London with a review of leasehold in London and made a number of recommendations to him. The Mayor should:

  • Continue to advocate to national Government to take action to ensure that existing leaseholders benefit from remedies as a result of any reform in the leasehold sector.
  • Once the Law Commission’s recommendations for reform of commonhold are published, the Mayor should advocate that the Government implement any recommendations which will enable the use of commonhold for mixed-use developments and shared ownership homes.
  • Encourage developers and councils to provide potential buyers with a copy of the lease early on in the purchase process and before the potential buyer has made a commitment to the purchase.
  • Ensure that any private sale or affordable home ownership home, that is listed on the Homes for Londoners portal includes a key features document and or explains the key features of the lease.
  • Work with the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government to ensure data is available on the number and distribution of leasehold across London. If this data is not available, the Mayor should ensure the GLA starts compiling and publishing data for London.
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Related documents

Letter to the Mayor on leasehold

Response from Mayor on leaseholders in London