Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
Monday 04 December 2023 5:29 am  |  Updated:  Friday 01 December 2023 4:40 pm

Britain’s anachronistic system for leaseholds is still firmly intact

By: Will Prescott

Add as a preferred source on Google
Levelling-up Secretary Michael Gove announced plans to prevent sale of new leasehold homes. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

From refusing to cap ground rents, and limited reforms to leaseholds, our anachronistic housing system still won’t change under new proposals, writes Will Prescott

With less than a year to go before a likely general election, the Prime Minister is running out of time to craft a lasting policy legacy. 

Described by the housing secretary as “an outdated feudal system that needs to go”, the leasehold system means that England’s nearly 5 million leaseholders do not technically fully own their properties. Instead, they merely have the “right to live in their property for a given period”, typically 99 or 125 years, although they do have the right to extend this. The system has largely been abolished elsewhere in the former British Empire, including in Scotland. 

This anachronistic ownership structure creates many problems. If the lease falls below a certain number of years, the property’s value declines and the cost of extending the lease increases dramatically. If leaseholders want to make changes to their properties, or even, in some cases, adopt a pet, they need to obtain the freeholder’s permission. Some ground rents, which freeholders can charge leaseholders without providing anything in return, have increased to the point where properties have become unmortgageable. This in turn makes them extremely difficult to sell. 

The government’s proposed Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill, published last week, goes some way to rectifying these problems. These new proposals build on the modest changes the government has already made. Last year, it passed laws which capped ground rents at a peppercorn for new properties, but not for owners of existing leasehold houses and flats. 

The new rules expand the standard lease extension term from 90 to 990 years, abolish the requirement to live in a property for two years before extending the lease or purchasing the freehold 

and makes it easier for leasehold flat owners to change the management of their buildings. Unfortunately, the proposals still contain several major omissions. 

Read more

Londoners should back Andy Burnham’s property tax reforms – not fear them

Luxurious mansions surrounded by manicured gardens in an upscale residential neighborhood, highlighting opulent housing tr...

Most concerningly, despite longstanding Conservative pledges to do so, the Bill includes no commitment to cap ground rents that pre-date the previous laws. The 2019 Conservative manifesto promised to limit ground rents “to a peppercorn”. However, the government now merely pledges to “consult on capping existing ground rents” and only then will it “look to introduce a cap through this Bill”. 

Capping existing rents is legally and politically complicated because it effectively amounts to a transfer of wealth from freeholders to leaseholders, but these difficulties have been foreseen for some time. Until it does, many leaseholders will remain lumbered with unsaleable properties. 

Proposals also do not ban the sale of new leasehold houses or flats, as was originally intended. Rather embarrassingly, despite saying it bans the sale of new leasehold houses, the government has been forced to admit that the Bill’s drafters “did not have time” to include any such provisions. 

While the government will likely try to amend the Bill to correct this, it still has no plans to ban the sale of leasehold flats. This especially matters considering that 70 per cent of England’s existing leasehold dwellings (some 3.m) are flats, whereas sales of new-build leasehold houses have fallen to less than one per cent of total new house sales. As well as disappointing campaigners, it has also upset some of the government’s own MPs, who are threatening to rebel over the issue. 

More fundamentally, as the Law Commission argued in 2020, many of the problems with the leasehold are “inherent” to the system itself. Unless the government forbids the sale of new leasehold flats in addition to the sale of new leasehold houses, there is no hope of phasing it out. 

More radical leasehold reforms would never have been easy, but it would have made a huge difference to millions of English leaseholders. Instead, there is now a real risk that Keir Starmer’s Labour will beat the Tories to leasehold abolition and prove itself the true home of a property-owning democracy. 

Read more

Heatwave fans demand for aircon stocks

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion

Categories

  • Opinion

Trending Articles

  • Top Burnham adviser calls for capital gains and inheritance tax hikes

  • Clarkson’s Farm and why businesses must stop blaming the weather

  • Two solicitors linked to Post Office scandal charged with misconduct

  • Lloyd’s deputy chair: The City is a club in the best sense

  • A meeting with the breakfast king of Mayfair

More from City PM

  • Londoners should back Andy Burnham’s property tax reforms – not fear them

    Opinion
    Luxurious mansions surrounded by manicured gardens in an upscale residential neighborhood, highlighting opulent housing tr...
  • Heatwave fans demand for aircon stocks

    Investing
  • Right to Buy has been a huge success, of course the left hates it

    Opinion
    Modern apartment buildings representing social housing initiatives in urban development, highlighting sustainable architec...
  • London councils won’t be able to sue their way to more homes being built

    Politics
    London Mayor Sadiq Khan
  • Hypha Emerges From Stealth, Announces a $50M Seed Round

    Business Wire
  • Mahmood unveils refugee sponsorship route as asylum bill faces Labour test

    Politics
  • EU airport chief: ‘I don’t know how we’ll cope’ with new border system

    Transport & Infrastructure
    Drop off charges at UK airports have reached the highest level on record amid booming travel demand this summer.
  • Natwest housing finance chief: Social housing changes lives – I would know

    Opinion
    Trellick Tower UK council estate architecture, highlighting its iconic brutalist design against a clear sky backdrop.

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy