Buying and Selling Property UK 2026 — The Complete Process Guide

Buying a Flat vs a House UK — Pros, Cons, and Costs Compared

Should you buy a flat or a house in the UK? A full comparison of costs, leasehold vs freehold, service charges, and what to watch out for.

Mortgage information is general guidance only. Mortgages are regulated by the FCA. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. Consult an FCA-regulated mortgage adviser before making decisions.

For many UK buyers — especially first-timers — the choice between a flat and a house is one of the biggest financial decisions you’ll make. Each has pros, cons, and costs that aren’t always obvious.

For the wider cluster covering conveyancing, surveys, chains, selling routes and property-transaction decisions, use the main Buying and Selling Property UK hub.

Quick Comparison

FeatureFlatHouse
Average priceLower (typically 20–40% less)Higher
Ownership typeUsually leaseholdUsually freehold
Service chargesYes (£1,000–£5,000+/year)No
Ground rentYes (being reformed)No (freehold)
Maintenance responsibilityShared (via service charge)Yours entirely
Outdoor spaceLimited (balcony or communal)Garden (usually)
SpaceSmallerLarger
LocationOften better for central locationsOften suburban or rural
Capital growthGenerally slowerGenerally faster
ResaleCan be harder (leasehold issues)Usually easier
First-time buyer suitabilityGood stepping stoneBetter long-term value

Costs Compared

Purchase Price

Property typeUK average price (2024)
Flat~£220,000
Terraced house~£260,000
Semi-detached~£300,000
Detached house~£440,000

Ongoing Annual Costs

CostFlatHouse
Mortgage (£200k, 25yr, 5%)£14,040£14,040 (same amount borrowed)
Service charge£1,500 – £5,000£0
Ground rent£200 – £500£0
Council taxOften lower bandOften higher band
Buildings insuranceIncluded in service charge£200 – £500 (you arrange)
Contents insurance£100 – £250£150 – £350
Maintenance/repairsCovered by service charge (mostly)£1,000 – £3,000+ (your responsibility)
Total annual cost£16,000 – £20,000£15,500 – £18,000

One-Off Costs (Buying)

CostFlatHouseDifference
Stamp duty (FTB, £250k)£0 (FTB relief)£0 (FTB relief)Same
Solicitor£1,000 – £2,000£1,000 – £1,500Flat often more (leasehold checks)
Survey£300 – £600£400 – £700Similar
Leasehold enquiries£200 – £500£0Extra cost for flats

Leasehold — The Big Issue with Flats

How Leasehold Works

ElementDetail
You ownThe right to live there for the lease term
You don’t ownThe building or the land
Freeholder ownsThe building and land
Lease termTypically starts at 99 or 125 years
What you payGround rent + service charge to the freeholder
Major decisionsFreeholder controls (or management company)

Lease Length Matters

Lease remainingImpact
90+ yearsFine — mortgage lenders happy
80–90 yearsGetting short — harder to mortgage, more expensive to extend
Under 80 yearsExpensive to extend — “marriage value” kicks in (50% of value increase)
Under 70 yearsVery difficult to mortgage
Under 60 yearsMost lenders won’t touch it

Lease Extension Costs

Lease remainingApproximate extension cost (£250k flat)
90 years£5,000 – £10,000
80 years£10,000 – £20,000
70 years£20,000 – £40,000
60 years£30,000 – £60,000+

Leasehold reform is ongoing — the government has committed to making lease extensions cheaper and potentially scrapping ground rent for existing leases. But legislation is slow.

Service Charges

What’s typically includedCost contribution
Building maintenanceMajor portion
Communal cleaningModerate
Lift maintenanceSignificant (high-rise)
Communal gardensModerate
Buildings insuranceSignificant (you can’t choose provider)
Management company fees10%–15% of total service charge
Sinking fund / reserve fundFor future major works

Major Works — The Surprise Bill

WorkTypical cost per flat
Roof replacement£3,000 – £10,000
External decorating£1,000 – £3,000
Cladding remediation£10,000 – £100,000+ (post-Grenfell)
Lift replacement£2,000 – £5,000
Window replacement£2,000 – £5,000
Plumbing/heating overhaul£2,000 – £8,000

Houses — What to Know

Freehold Benefits

BenefitDetail
You own everythingThe building AND the land
No service chargesBut all maintenance is your cost
No ground rentNothing to pay
Full controlExtend, modify, decorate — your choice (with planning permission)
Better capital growthHouses typically appreciate faster
Easier to sellNo leasehold complications

House Maintenance Costs

MaintenanceTypical cost
Boiler service£80 – £150/year
Boiler replacement£2,500 – £4,000 (every 10–15 years)
Roof repairs£500 – £5,000+
Damp treatment£500 – £3,000
Repointing£1,000 – £5,000
Window replacement£3,000 – £10,000
Kitchen/bathroom renovation£5,000 – £20,000
Garden maintenance£500 – £2,000/year (or DIY)

Budget £1,000–£3,000 per year for ongoing maintenance but build a reserve for bigger works.

Investment Comparison

Capital Growth

Property typeAverage annual growth (long-term)
Houses4% – 6%
Flats2% – 4%

Flats typically grow in value more slowly, partly because:

  • Lease depreciation (lease gets shorter each year)
  • Service charge concerns put off buyers
  • Oversupply of new-build flats in some areas
  • Cladding and building safety issues (post-Grenfell)

Mortgage Considerations

FactorFlatHouse
DepositSame percentageSame percentage
Interest rateSometimes slightly higherStandard
Lease length requirementMust have 70+ years remaining (ideally 80+)N/A
Non-standard constructionCheck if insurableLess common issue
Cladding issuesCan prevent mortgageN/A

Decision Framework

Buy a Flat If

FactorWhy
You’re a first-time buyer on a budgetMore affordable entry point
You want a central locationFlats dominate city centres
You don’t want garden maintenanceCommunal spaces maintained for you
You’re buying as a stepping stoneBuild equity, then upgrade later
Security is importantOften better security (communal entrance, CCTV)

Buy a House If

FactorWhy
You want full ownership and controlFreehold = you own everything
You have a growing familyMore space, garden, storage
You’re buying long-termBetter value and capital growth
You want to avoid service chargesNo ongoing charges to a freeholder
You want to extend or modifyFull flexibility (with planning permission)

Summary

FactorFlatHouse
Cheaper to buyYesNo
Cheaper to runNo (service charges add up)Often similar or cheaper overall
Better locationOftenSometimes
Better investmentUsually noUsually yes
More controlNoYes
Leasehold riskYesNo (usually freehold)
Best for first-timersGood stepping stoneBetter if affordable
Key adviceCheck lease length, service charges, sinking fund, and claddingBudget for maintenance

aliases:

  • /mortgages/buying-selling/buying-flat-vs-house-guide/

Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.

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Sources

  1. FCA — Mortgages
  2. MoneyHelper — Buying a home