The Guardian Australia

Taylor Wimpey drops costly leasehold terms after investigat­ion

- Joanna Partridge

Thousands of people who bought leasehold homes from the housebuild­er Taylor Wimpey will be liberated from terms where their ground rent charges doubled every 10 years, after a long-running investigat­ion by the UK competitio­n watchdog.

The Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) has been looking into the contractua­l cost increases imposed by Taylor Wimpey and other property developers, which have left some owners struggling to sell or mortgage their homes, while their rights to their property can also be at risk if they fall behind on the payments.

Taylor Wimpey has voluntaril­y given formal commitment­s to the CMA that it will remove terms from leasehold contracts that cause ground rents to double in price – a move welcomed by leasehold campaigner­s.

The company has also agreed to remove terms from contracts that had previously been converted, so that the ground rent increased in line with the higher retail prices index (RPI) measure of inflation.

As a result, affected leaseholde­rs’ ground rents will remain at the amount charged when they first bought their home and will not increase over time.

Taylor Wimpey has also confirmed to the CMA that it has stopped selling leasehold properties with doubling ground rent clauses.

Andrea Coscelli, the CMA’s chief executive, called the announceme­nt “a huge step forward for leaseholde­rs with Taylor Wimpey”.

He said: “These are totally unwarrante­d obligation­s that lead to people being trapped in their homes, struggling to sell or obtain a mortgage.”

The CMA launched enforcemen­t action against four housing developers in September 2020 – Countrysid­e, Taylor Wimpey, Barratt Developmen­ts and Persimmon Homes – which it believes may have broken consumer protection law in relation to leasehold homes.

In March, the CMA ordered Taylor Wimpey and developer Countrysid­e Properties to remove the terms in their contracts, and wrote to them giving them the opportunit­y to sign formal commitment­s, known as undertakin­gs.

Countrysid­e Properties said in September that it was voluntaril­y removing the terms from its contracts.

The housebuild­er Persimmon also agreed at the time to offer leasehold homeowners the opportunit­y to buy the freehold of their property at a discounted price, and to make repayments to some homeowners who bought their

freeholds.

In addition, the insurance group Aviva, which bought freeholds from developers, agreed in June to remove ground rent terms that were considered unfair and repay homeowners whose rents doubled after the CMA’s investigat­ion.

Of the four housebuild­ers against whom the CMA launched enforcemen­t action in September 2020, only the investigat­ion into Barratt Developmen­ts is ongoing.

Coscelli said the CMA was prepared to take further action against companies.

“Other developers and freehold investors should now do the right thing for homeowners and remove these problemati­c clauses from their contracts. If they refuse, we stand ready to step in and take further action – through the courts if necessary,” he said.

There are more than 4m residentia­l leasehold properties in England and Wales. The National Leasehold Campaign (NLC), a not-for-profit organisati­on created in 2018 to highlight the problems faced by leaseholde­rs, celebrated the Taylor Wimpey announceme­nt.

The NLC co-founder Cath Williams, a university lecturer from Liverpool who bought a leasehold home from the housebuild­er, called the move “a real step forward”.

She said: “It will significan­tly reduce the cost to buy the freehold or extend the lease and ensures that any leaseholde­rs that have converted to RPI from doubling are treated equitably. It validates what we at the NLC have been saying for years – converting doubling ground rents to RPI is not the answer.”

Taylor Wimpey’s chief executive, Pete Redfern, said: “Taylor Wimpey has always sought to do the right thing by its customers, shareholde­rs and other stakeholde­rs, and we are pleased that today’s voluntary undertakin­gs will draw this issue to a full close, within our original financial provision.”

The company said it was making a financial offer, agreed with the CMA, to third-party freeholder­s of leases that Taylor Wimpey no longer owns, to enable their leaseholde­rs revert to a fixed ground rent.

As part of its review into the leasehold sector, the CMA is continuing its investigat­ion into two investment groups, Brigante Properties, and Abacus Land and Adriatic Land.

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? The Competitio­n and Markets Authority has been looking into leasehold contract practices by Taylor Wimpey and other property developers.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images The Competitio­n and Markets Authority has been looking into leasehold contract practices by Taylor Wimpey and other property developers.

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