Birmingham Post

Call for leaseholde­rs to to have greater powers

- Vicky Shaw Special Correspond­ent

REFORMS to make it easier and cheaper for leaseholde­rs in England and Wales to take control of their homes have been recommende­d by the Law Commission.

This would strengthen the powers available to leaseholde­rs, while at the same time reinvigora­ting the system of commonhold as an alternativ­e to leasehold.

The Commission said the leasehold system is not working for millions of home owners.

The system, which has been described as “medieval”, has attracted controvers­y amid concerns about leaseholde­rs paying high and unfair charges and being faced with further costs if they want to change their situation.

With a leasehold home, people own their property, often a flat, for the length of their lease agreement with the freeholder. The leaseholde­r does not own the land the property is on and may be charged ground rent.

When the lease ends, ownership returns to the freeholder, unless the lease can be extended, an option which may be expensive. A property with a short lease remaining could also be hard to sell on.

The Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) has recently raised concerns about leasehold home owners having been unfairly treated.

Its concerns included home owners having to pay escalating ground rents, which in some cases can double every 10 years. People can struggle to sell their homes and find themselves trapped, the CMA said previously.

It has been estimated there are at least 4.3 million leasehold homes in England alone.

The Law Commission said that if enacted, its reforms would reinvigora­te commonhold – which allows people to own a flat with a freehold title, no landlord and no lease to expire – as an option to replace leasehold for newly-built flats.

Its recommenda­tions would also give leaseholde­rs a route out of leasehold by making it easier to convert to commonhold. Conversion­s to commonhold would not need the agreement of every person, although there would be safeguards to protect those who have not agreed. This would prevent those who are opposed and who currently have a veto from wrecking the process.

The Commission also suggested making it easier and cheaper for leaseholde­rs to take over the management of their building without buying the freehold, by exercising the “right to manage”.

This right would allow leaseholde­rs to take control of services, repairs, maintenanc­e, improvemen­ts, and insurance.

It also said there should be a new right to a lease extension for leaseholde­rs of both houses and flats, for a term of 990 years, in place of shorter extensions of 90 or 50 years under current law. There would be no ongoing ground rent under the extended lease. It also recommende­d that leaseholde­rs who already have a very long lease should be able to buy out the ground rent without extending their lease.

At the moment, leaseholde­rs are required to pay their landlord’s uncapped costs, when they buy the freehold or extend their lease, the Commission said. It recommende­d that leaseholde­rs’ liability to pay their landlord’s costs should be eliminated or controlled.

The Commission said its proposals would work in tandem with planned Government changes to create fitfor-purpose home ownership across England and Wales.

Professor Nick Hopkins, commission­er for property law, said: “The leasehold system is not working for millions of home owners in England and Wales. We have heard how the current law leaves them feeling like they don’t truly own their home.

“Our reforms will make a real difference by giving leaseholde­rs greater control over their homes, offering a cheaper and easier route out of leasehold, and establishi­ng commonhold as the preferred alternativ­e system.

“The reforms will provide a better deal for leaseholde­rs and make our homes work for us, and not somebody else.”

 ??  ?? The leasehold system is not working for millions of home owners
The leasehold system is not working for millions of home owners

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