The government has set out wide-ranging plans to overhaul the leasehold system in England and Wales, with changes expected to affect millions of current and future homeowners.
One thing that stands out in particular under the proposals, which will bring relief to many leaseholders, is news that annual ground rent will be capped at £250. Not only that, it will reduce to a nominal “peppercorn” rate after 40 years.
In an area like Edgware, where apartment living will play a key role in local large-scale regeneration and already does when it comes to first-time buyer and buy-to-let demand, the proposed ground rent cap could remove a major barrier to mortgage approval and resale.
Here’s why it matters to buyers, homeowners and buy-to-let investors here in Edgware.
Ministers say the move will ease financial pressure on leaseholders, removing one of the most controversial aspects of the current system.
But it’s more than that. Because the issue of ground rent doubling has become a blight on the property sector in recent months and years, as more and more leasehold properties have reached the point where ground rent has doubled (often after 25 years), and another doubling would be due at some point. This not only impacts the leaseholder’s pocket, but it can push the ground rent amount beyond a level acceptable to mortgage lenders. This isn’t a hypothetical fancy, either – it happens frequently and has caused real problems for the leasehold sales market.
It has left many otherwise willing leasehold purchasers unable to proceed with the transaction, and leasehold owners unable to sell without securing a deed of variation – a costly and time-consuming process.
The reforms were announced this week by Prime Minister Keir Starmer, with his address focussing on how these changes will help households grappling with the cost of living.
Nevertheless, the impacts on the property market, given how these proposals will ease leasehold ownership and make it more attractive again, should not be understated.
Alongside the ground rent cap, the government plans to ban the creation of new leasehold flats (as a legal definition) and introduce legislation designed to give homeowners greater authority over their properties.
More than five million leaseholders are expected to benefit from the draft Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill, which the government says will fundamentally reshape homeownership across England and Wales.
By limiting ground rent and eventually reducing it to zero in real terms, ministers aim to bring an end to what they describe as excessive charges with little or no service provided in return.
According to government estimates, some leaseholders could save over £4,000 across the lifetime of their lease. Actually, I believe they have underestimated the saving.
But I also don’t see the saving, per se, as being the main cause for relief. These reforms are expected to help unlock stalled property sales, where high or escalating ground rents have made homes difficult to mortgage or sell – and that will make a real difference to local people here in North London.
Housing secretary Steve Reed has since reiterated that the current system has left many flat owners exposed to rising, unaffordable ground rents, and that the reforms will save leaseholders money while giving them greater control over their homes. But he adds the more pertinent point that the leasehold model had undermined confidence in homeownership for too long.
For Edgware buyers operating within tighter affordability limits, removing the risk of escalating ground rent could be the difference between proceeding and pulling out. But more than that, it removes a barrier that prevents lenders from offering mortgages to these buyers in the first place.
The proposed reform will also abolish forfeiture, a mechanism that allows leaseholders to lose their home and any built-up equity over relatively small debts. The aim is to replace it with a new enforcement framework that rebalances the relationship between leaseholders and freeholders.
This is long overdue.
A revamped commonhold system will form a central part of the reforms. Existing leaseholders will be given a more transparent, straightforward route to convert to commonhold, where residents collectively own and manage their building. Under the new model, homeowners would have a direct say in budgets, building management and major decisions, as well as stronger protections when disputes arise.
The government says the updated commonhold framework will be designed to work across different types of developments and meet the requirements of mortgage lenders, with more explicit rules around governance, repairs and accountability.
These changes build on measures already underway through the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024, including improved transparency around service charges. The announcement follows the passage of the government’s Renters’ Rights Act, which aims to strengthen protections across the wider housing sector.
National reforms can have very different effects at a local level, however. In Edgware, leasehold flats form a growing part of the housing mix, especially with the large-scale regeneration-led Broadwalk Centre development on the cards, not to mention numerous other flatted developments around Edgware, Stanmore, Wembley and Barnet. Understanding how these changes apply to individual leases will be key.
We are required by law to conduct anti-money laundering checks on all those selling or buying a property. Whilst we retain responsibility for ensuring checks and any ongoing monitoring are carried out correctly, the initial checks are carried out on our behalf by Lifetime Legal who will contact you once you have agreed to instruct us in your sale or had an offer accepted on a property you wish to buy. The cost of these checks is £60 (incl. VAT), which covers the cost of obtaining relevant data and any manual checks and monitoring which might be required. This fee will need to be paid by you in advance of us publishing your property (in the case of a vendor) or issuing a memorandum of sale (in the case of a buyer), directly to Lifetime Legal, and is non-refundable. We will receive some of the fee taken by Lifetime Legal to compensate for its role in the provision of these checks.