9th November 2023 – update

After the King’s Speech on Tuesday the Prime Minister issued a briefing giving more details on what was outlined in the speech – this is the link to the full document – it runs to 78 pages

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/654a21952f045e001214dcd7/The_King_s_Speech_background_briefing_notes.pdf

In relation to the proposed leasehold reform pages 45 – 47 are as follows: I have highlighted the most relevant points

Leasehold and Freehold Bill
“My Ministers will bring forward a bill to reform the housing market by making it cheaper and easier for leaseholders to purchase their freehold and tackling the exploitation of millions of homeowners through punitive service charges.”

  • The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill delivers the Government’s manifesto
    commitments on leasehold reform. This decisive action will address one of the
    longest-term challenges that the country faces: fairness in the housing market.
  • The Bill will make the long-term and necessary changes to improve home
    ownership for millions of leaseholders in England and Wales, by making it cheaper
    and easier for more leaseholders to extend their lease, buy their freehold, and take
    over management of their building.
  • These reforms build on the success of the Leasehold Reform (Ground Rents) Act
    2022, which put an end to ground rents for new, qualifying long residential
    leasehold properties in England and Wales as part of the most significant changes
    to property law in a generation.

What does the Bill do?
● The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill will put the country on the right path for
the future by giving homeowners a fairer deal in the following ways:

  • Empowering leaseholders:

o Making it cheaper and easier for existing leaseholders in houses and
flats to extend their lease or buy their freehold – so that leaseholders pay
less to gain security over the future of their home.

o Increasing the standard lease extension term from 90 years to 990 years
for both houses and flats, with ground rent reduced to £0. This will ensure
that leaseholders can enjoy secure, ground rent free ownership of their
properties for years to come, without the hassle and expense of future lease
extensions.

o Removing the requirement for a new leaseholder to have owned their
house or flat for two years before they can benefit from these changes –
so that more leaseholders can exercise their right to the security of freehold
ownership or a 990-year lease extension as soon as possible.

o Increasing the 25 per cent ‘non-residential’ limit preventing leaseholders
in buildings with a mixture of homes and other uses such as shops and
offices, from buying their freehold or taking over management of their
buildings – to allow leaseholders in buildings with up to 50 per cent non-
residential floorspace to buy their freehold or take over its management.

  • Improving leaseholders’ consumer rights:
  • Making buying or selling a leasehold property quicker and easier by
    setting a maximum time and fee for the provision of information required to
    make a sale (such as building insurance or financial records) to a leaseholder
    by their freeholder (known as ‘landlords’).

o Requiring transparency over leaseholders’ service charges – so all
leaseholders receive better transparency over the costs they are being
charged by their freeholder or managing agent in a standardised comparable
format and can scrutinise and better challenge them if they are unreasonable.

o Replacing buildings insurance commissions for managing agents,
landlords and freeholders with transparent administration fees – to stop
leaseholders being charged exorbitant, opaque commissions on top of their
premiums.

o Extending access to “redress” schemes for leaseholders to challenge
poor practice. We will require more freeholders to belong to a redress
scheme so leaseholders can challenge them if needed.

o Scrapping the presumption for leaseholders to pay their freeholders’
legal costs when challenging poor practice.

o Granting freehold homeowners on private and mixed tenure estates the
same rights of redress as leaseholders – by extending equivalent rights to
transparency over their estate charges, access to support via redress
schemes, and to challenge the charges they pay by taking a case to a
Tribunal, just like existing leaseholders.

o Building on the legislation brought forward by the Building Safety Act
2022, ensuring freeholders and developers are unable to escape their
liabilities to fund building remediation work – protecting leaseholders by
extending the measures in the Building Safety Act 2022 to ensure it operates
as intended.

  • Reforming the leasehold market:

o Banning the creation of new leasehold houses so that – other than in
exceptional circumstances – every new house in England and Wales will be
freehold from the outset.

  • We will also consult on capping existing ground rents, to ensure that all
    leaseholders are protected from making payments that require no service or benefit
    in return, have no requirement to be reasonable, and can cause issues when
    people want to sell their properties. Subject to that consultation, we will look to
    introduce a cap through this Bill.

Territorial extent and application

  • The Bill will extend and apply to England and Wales.
    Key facts
  • The Building Safety Act 2022 delivered far-reaching protections for leaseholders
    against remediation costs and an ambitious enforcement regime to hold
    freeholders and developers to account.
  • There are 752,000 households with children and 1.48 million over-65s who are
    leasehold homeowners.
  • Leasehold reform will support the housing market. 49 per cent of leaseholders are
    first time buyers, and 28 per cent of leaseholders are under 35. Land Registry data
    tells us that 22 per cent of residential property transactions in 2019 were leasehold
    – around 238,000 transactions in total. Almost all flats are sold on a leasehold basis
    compared to 6 per cent of houses.
  • The current leasehold system leaves many homeowners trapped in their properties
    or facing extortionate costs to buy their freeholds, for example:

o Case Study 1: Sian paid £225,000 in 2020 for her new build flat in Southend.
Her lease had a ground rent indexation start date of March 2018 (when the
development started) with 5-year reviews based on RPI, and so is now due
for review. As a result, Sian has seen her ground rent rise from £350 to over
£450 per year and she is braced for another RPI review in five years’ time.

o Case Study 2: Zack bought a flat in North Yorkshire in 2008 with a ground rent
of £300 and a 10-year doubling clause, meaning he now pays £600. Zack
wants to sell the flat and is considering a lease extension to extinguish the
ground rent as he does not think lenders will lend against a lease with the
current ground rent terms. He has been quoted £25,000 to extend the lease
and cannot afford to pay this sum.

  • Our reforms will tackle these issues head on:

o We are making it significantly cheaper for leaseholders to extend their leases.
For example, a young first-time buyer in a £250,000 leasehold flat in
Birmingham with 76 years left on the lease would currently have to pay around
£16,000 to extend the lease plus around £10,000 to cover their costs and the
freeholder’s costs. Under our reforms, they will now only pay around £9,000
plus their own legal costs for a 990-year extension – a saving of over £10,000.

o The ground rents cap we are consulting on could save leaseholders up to an
average of £250 in year one and £6,000 over the remaining term of their lease
– that would be £250 back in people’s pockets each year. This will also make
it easier for people to sell their properties and get mortgages.

I have consdered the examples given and an analysis of these examples shows that they are not completely accurate and can only be considered an example of the type of saving that might be possible wiith their prposals – the examples appear to have been taken from the previous consultation on Leasehold reform and the example set in Birmingham has been calculated using variables suitable for leasehold houses and not flats. It appears these examples have been used to broadly illustrate the Government’s aims rather than to be accurate examples.  

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