Changes To Leasehold Laws: What You Need To Know

Posted on: 9 December 2024

Changes to Leasehold Laws: What You Need to Know

If you own or are buying or selling a leasehold property, there could be some significant changes to think about in 2025.

 

With a leasehold property, you own the property but don’t own the land it sits on. Instead, you have a lease on it for a set number of years. You also pay ground rent to whoever owns the land – the freeholder.

 

There are five million leasehold properties in England and Wales. Most flats and some houses are leasehold. (Scotland has a different system and no longer has leasehold.)

 

The last government passed the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act just before the general election – although it didn’t bring the new rules into operation.

 

Once this new law is in place, it will make it easier and cheaper for some leaseholders to extend or buy their freehold. It will increase lease extensions to 990 years with zero ground rent. It will provide more transparency on service charges. It will ban new houses from being sold leasehold. It will make it easier for more flat leaseholders to manage their block.

 

In November, the government pledged to bring these new rules into law ‘at pace’ and proposed more changes to leasehold law. Housing Minister Matthew Pennycook said a new Leasehold and Commonhold Reform Bill will be announced in 2025.

 

This new proposed law will further strengthen leaseholders’ rights to extend or buy their lease or manage their property. It will tackle unregulated ground rents and address maintenance charges on private housing estates. It could bring in new rules for managing agents.

 

The new Bill will also propose a new form of ownership known as commonhold to replace leasehold. With commonhold, everyone in a block of flats owns their own flat and shares the block on a freehold basis. It is a very different way of owning property compared to leasehold.

 

Leasehold reform – what should we do now?

 

Although there are likely to be some big changes in 2025, there is some uncertainty about whether and when the new laws will be enacted. So it’s important to keep yourself informed.

 

If you are selling a leasehold property or considering buying one – the property particulars will tell you this.

 

It’s also essential to take advice from your estate agent or conveyancing solicitor. They can explain exactly what these changes could mean for you.

 

The Leasehold Advisory Service website also offers independent advice for residential leaseholders.

 

Would someone you know benefit from reading this article? Why not share it with them?

Share:


Recent Articles

9 March 2026

A Guide To Selling A Probate Or Inherited Property

Selling the property of a deceased relative is very different from an ordinary house sale. Alongside the practical steps, there is often grief, family discussion and the responsibility of making the right decisions for everyone involved. In many cases, probate will be required before the...

2 March 2026

How To Switch Estate Agents Successfully

If your home has been on the market for a while without serious interest or offers, frustration is completely natural. The question many sellers start asking is simple: Should I change estate agents? Before making that decision, here’s a clear and practical way to approach it....

23 February 2026

Room 101: Five Things That Instantly Put Medway Home Buyers Off

For anyone unfamiliar, Room 101 is from George Orwell's classic book, Nineteen Eighty-Four. The room was the place containing a person’s worst fears. It later became a well-known TV show, Room 101, where guests tried to banish their pet hates forever. When it comes to selling a...

Get an instant online valuation

Find out how much your property is worth