Lease lengths are being granted at both 990 years and 50-90 years, as only some are honouring the provisions in the Leasehold and Freehold Act.
The act was rushed through parliament in May ahead of the general election, which means there are still grey areas to interpret.
There are concerns that the act’s implementation may be delayed, given that it came from the Conservative government and Labour is now in charge.
Lauren Blackman, partner at solicitor firm Gardner Leader, said “the market is effectively split, with some choosing to honour the new legislation and issue 990-year renewals or extensions, while many others are looking to secure additional income by only providing 90 and 50 year extensions.
There are also those in the middle waiting for the final pieces of the legislation to come into effect. The danger here for all parties is that whichever camp they are in, we may be months away from a resolution, leaving everyone in limbo.“
Other changes outlined under the Act include:
- Reduce costs for leaseholders by removing the requirement to pay the freeholder’s expenses when challenging poor practice.
- Allow leaseholders to purchase their freehold or extend their lease immediately after purchasing a lease, instead of waiting two years.
- Prohibit the sale of new build leasehold houses, with some exceptions.
- Remove marriage value (the increase of property value following a lease extension) from the cost calculation for leasehold enfranchisement.
What is in the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024?
Essentially, all of the much talked about changes are there including the 990-year lease extension, abolition of the two-year rule and the change in qualification criteria for mixed use buildings.
In addition, we will see the end of marriage value for leases under 80 years and the end of the ability for the landlord to recover their costs from the tenant under a standard statutory claim. There are also changes that relate to property management.
The valuation changes will mean that most valuations will be on the ‘standard’ basis – effectively a term and reversion calculation with a presumed 0.1% cap on the ground rent when valuing the freeholder’s interest.
In addition, there is a ban on the creation of new leasehold houses.
What is not in the Act?
The much-discussed cap on ground rents, whether that be at £250, a peppercorn (nil) or otherwise. The thinking had been that this might make it into the Bill, if the outcome of the consultation was published prior to the parliamentary stages being completed. It could then have been the subject of a late-stage amendment. The truncated process meant that this could not happen and so changes to ground rents will have to wait for further legislation under the new government.
There is no news at the moment as to when (if at all) the results of the consultation will be published although the Labour manifesto committed to controlling ground rents and the King’s Speech also promised that the draft Leasehold and Commonhold Reform Bill would “tackling existing ground rents by regulating ground rents for existing leaseholders so they no longer face unregulated and unaffordable costs”. This suggests that this may be the subject of future legislation and held over until the new Bill is presented to parliament,
Is it law?
Yes, the Act received Royal Assent in May 2024 at the end of the final session of the previous Parliament.
Where does the Act leave us now?
Well, we know what the new Act provides. What we don’t know is the detail of, for instance, how some of the critical rates such as the deferment rate or capitalisation rate will be arrived at. These are to be prescribed by the Secretary of State and reviewed every 10 years (according to Paragraph 26 of Schedule 4 and Paragraph 38 of Schedule 5). This will be critical to determining value in the ‘new world.’
We will need to see the secondary legislation to find out how these will be determined. Our understanding (from the previous government correspondence and a parliamentary written answer in the Lords) indicates a determination to facilitate a smooth transition. How the new Labour government will respond to this remains unclear, but at this stage it seems reasonable to believe that the likely timescale for implementation might well be similar to that envisaged by the previous administration. One key question is how much consultation there will be before the relevant secondary legislation or ministerial orders are produced to bring this into effect.
That could mean that some of it will take some time.
When did the 2024 Act come into force?
Details on commencement are set out in Section 124 of the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act. A small number of provisions came into force on 24 July, two months after Royal Assent. These are: measures relating to the remedy for rent charge arrears; the repeal of Section 125 of the Building Safety Act 2022; new procedures under that 2022 Act where an insolvency practitioner is appointed for a higher-risk or relevant building; and a measure which allows the recovery of legal and other professional service costs via the service charge, where they are incurred by a resident management company or right to manage company in connection with obtaining remediation contribution orders under that 2022 Act.
The remainder of the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 will come into effect at the discretion of the new government. (i.e. it is not yet in force).
Most of the ‘meatier’ parts of the Act, as far as leasehold reform is concerned are likely to be subject to commencement under Statutory Instruments. These Statutory Instruments will need to be made by the Secretary of State and we also know that in order to be effective the valuation changes will need various matters such as the relevant rates to be prescribed. These will need to be in place before these changes can be enacted. It is quite possible that consultation on these will be needed before the full detail of the enabling legislation can be produced.
It Is hard to predict, but given the above, the most likely timescale seems to be 2025-2026 because of the need to draft the secondary legislation needed to bring the changes into effect.
What else do we have to look forward to?
The King’s Speech on 17 July 2024 revealed the new government’s plans to add to the leasehold reform agenda with a new Leasehold and Commonhold Reform Bill. This will aim to make commonhold compulsory for new flats and “end the injustice of forfeiture” for residential leases. In addition, it promises to tackle unfair ground rents and freeholds where estate management charges sit outside the service charge regime.
The draft Bill will also enact the “remaining Law Commission recommendations to bolster leaseholders’ fundamental rights”. The Law Commission in its report on Enfranchisement made a significant number of recommendations and suggested a larger programme of consolidating and reforming legislation.
This is therefore quite an ambitious programme of work and so a draft Bill is likely to take quite some time to produce. With that in mind, it may well be that this legislation does not make it into the first legislative session of this Parliament, given the amount of groundwork that would need to be done to bring this legislation forward.
So anyone expecting an immediate change on the valuation side (or indeed elsewhere) may well have to wait a little while. We may well know a bit more once parliament starts sitting at the start of September, so watch this space.