Conveyancing body urges govt to keep promises on leasehold | Mortgage Strategy

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The Conveyancing Association has called on the government to move “further and faster” on leasehold reforms and make good on its previous promises.

The trade body has highlighted a number of measures the government has yet to legislate for despite previously pledging to do so.

The policies include:

  • A fixed maximum fee payable of £200 and delivery within two weeks for the Leasehold Property Enquiry 1 (LPE1) form.
  • The banning of the sale of leasehold houses.
  • Removal of S.8(2) Law of Property Act from estate rentcharges so they cannot be converted to long leases if the rentcharge is not paid whether requested or not.
  • The capping of existing ground rents to the limits in the Housing Act 1988 to prevent long leases becoming assured shorthold tenancies.
  • A right to extend leases by 990 years.
  • Removing marriage and development value from the lease enfranchisement calculation.

The CA also pointed to the Law Commission’s reports of July 2020 calling for leaseholders who are unhappy with their lease administrator to be able to convert their property to commonhold and take over management of shared areas.

The trade body is calling on the government to take swift action after it set up a Commonhold Council to look at how this could be delivered.

It follows the Queen’s Speech announcement in May on the Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Bill, which promised to “prevent the practice of onerous and escalating ground rents from affecting future leaseholders”, to ensure that ‘“for the first time ground rents in new residential long leases will have no financial demand” and that “leases will be set in law at a genuine peppercorn level”. 

The new legislation will also “introduce new rights for Trading Standards to levy penalties on freeholders of up to £5,000 for breaches of the law”.

Conveyancing Association director of delivery Beth Rudolf says: “The CA, and many other industry stakeholders, have been urging the government to act on leasehold for the past eight years and, while it was very positive to see the Leasehold Reform Bill make it to the Queen’s Speech, we now need action in a whole host of areas, specifically those measures which have already been announced but have yet to be turned into specific legislation.

“There may be an assumption that while the noise has died down around leasehold a lot, the problems have gone away.

“That is certainly not the case and we now need to maintain the momentum that has been built up and finally get solutions to these problems on the statute book. 

“Especially when we are so close and agreement appears to be unanimous right across the industry.

“We can make such a difference to the lives of leaseholders by getting these promises delivered and we are urging the government to move as quickly as it can to do this.  

“The Ground Rent bill is the first step in the right direction but whilst this will prevent new leaseholds being used as an ongoing financial asset class, we still have all of those old leases with onerous lease terms which make them difficult to sell unless thousands of pounds are paid to the landlord to vary them to be acceptable to lending policy – that is simply not right or fair.  

“We should be creating a positive home moving experience for all.”


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