Property Ownership UK 2026 — Leasehold, Freehold, Ground Rent and Service Charges

Ground Rent and Service Charges Explained UK

Understanding ground rent and service charges for leasehold properties in the UK. What they cover, how they're calculated, and your rights as a leaseholder.

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.

Owning a leasehold property comes with ongoing costs. Here’s what you need to know about ground rent and service charges.

Ground Rent Explained

What Is Ground Rent?

DefinitionPayment
Annual chargeTo the freeholder
ForThe land your property sits on
SpecifiedIn your lease
PayableUsually annually or six-monthly

Types of Ground Rent

TypeDetails
PeppercornNominal — effectively £0
FixedSame amount throughout lease
SteppedIncreases at set intervals
RPI-linkedIncreases with inflation
DoublingDoubles every X years (problematic)

Ground Rent Amounts

Typical RangeAnnual Cost
Peppercorn£0-£10
Low£50-200
Moderate£200-500
High£500-1,000+
EscalatingCan become very high

The Doubling Problem

If Ground Rent Doubles Every 10 YearsAnnual Cost
Year 0£250
Year 10£500
Year 20£1,000
Year 30£2,000
Year 50£8,000
Year 80£64,000

This can make properties unmortgageable.

New Rules (2022 Onwards)

For New LeasesRules
Ground rent capPeppercorn (effectively zero)
Applies toLeases granted from 30 June 2022
Existing leasesNot affected (yet)
Reform ongoingMay address existing leases

How Ground Rent Works

Payment Process

StepDetails
Freeholder sends demandMust be in specific format
Notice requiredProper notice must be given
Payment dueAfter valid demand received
If no demandYou don’t have to pay proactively

Your Rights

RightDetails
Proper demandFreeholder must send formal notice
Prescribed formIncluding name and address for payment
Time to payAfter demand, not before
No penaltiesFor late payment after improper demand

What If You Don’t Pay?

ConsequenceDetails
Reminder lettersInitially
Interest chargesMay be added
Legal actionCounty Court claim
ForfeitureUltimately, could lose lease

Never ignore ground rent demands — seek advice if you can’t pay.

Service Charges Explained

What Service Charges Cover

Typically IncludedDetails
Buildings insuranceWhole building
Communal cleaningStairways, lobbies
GardeningShared grounds
LightingCommunal areas
External repairsWindows, roof, etc.
Lift maintenanceIf applicable
Management feesManaging agent
Reserve/sinking fundFuture major works

What’s Not Usually Included

Usually ExcludedWhy
Contents insuranceYour responsibility
Interior repairsInside your flat
Council taxSeparate
UtilitiesYour usage

How Service Charges Are Calculated

MethodDetails
Fixed percentageYour share of building (e.g., 10%)
Based on sizeLarger flats pay more
Equal shareAll flats same amount
Per leaseAs specified in lease

Typical Service Charge Amounts

Property TypeAnnual Range
Small block, basic£500-1,500
Medium block£1,500-3,000
Large block with lift£2,500-5,000
Luxury development£5,000-10,000+

Annual Budget vs Actual

ProcessDetails
BudgetEstimated costs for year
On-account paymentsMonthly or quarterly
Year-end reconciliationActual vs budget
AdjustmentRefund or additional payment

Major Works and Section 20

What Are Major Works?

TypeExamples
StructuralRoof replacement
ExternalFacade repairs
SystemsLift replacement, heating
Common partsLobby renovation

Section 20 Consultation

RequirementDetails
When triggeredWorks over £250 per leaseholder
What it requiresFreeholder must consult leaseholders
Stage 1Notice of intention, invite nominations
Stage 2Share estimates, consider observations
Stage 3Award contract, explain if not cheapest

Your Rights on Major Works

RightDetails
Be consultedOn works over £250
See estimatesMinimum two
Nominate contractorFor consideration
ChallengeIf not properly consulted
TribunalBreach of Section 20 limits recovery

Sinking/Reserve Fund

PurposeDetails
Save for futureMajor works
Regular contributionsPart of service charge
AvoidsBig one-off bills
Should beHeld in trust

Challenging Service Charges

Grounds for Challenge

ReasonPossible Challenge
Not in leaseCharge not covered by lease
Unreasonably highPaid over market rate
Not properly incurredNo evidence of work done
Section 20 breachNot properly consulted
Poor qualityWork not to reasonable standard

How to Challenge

StepAction
1Request summary of costs (Section 21)
2Request to inspect invoices (Section 22)
3Raise concerns with manager/freeholder
4Formal dispute process
5First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber)

Tribunal Process

StageDetails
ApplyTo First-tier Tribunal
Fee£100-400 depending on value
HearingPresent your case
DecisionTribunal determines reasonableness
BindingOn both parties

Your Rights as a Leaseholder

Information Rights

RightDetails
Summary of costsWithin 6 months of request
Inspect accountsSee invoices, receipts
Annual statementService charge breakdown
Insurance detailsSee policy

Right to Manage

FeatureDetails
What it isLeaseholders take over management
Requirement50% of leaseholders
No faultDon’t need to prove mismanagement
Set up RTM companyRun building yourselves

Collective Enfranchisement

FeatureDetails
What it isBuy the freehold collectively
Requirement50% of leaseholders
BenefitControl over everything
CostShare of freehold purchase

Red Flags to Watch

Ground Rent Concerns

Warning SignRisk
Doubling clauseBecomes unaffordable
No cap on increasesUnpredictable costs
Very high ground rentOngoing burden
Unclear termsGet legal advice

Service Charge Concerns

Warning SignRisk
No breakdown providedLack of transparency
No reserve fundBig bills for works
Unusually highCompare similar buildings
No consultation on worksChallenge possible

Summary: Key Points

Ground Rent

Key PointDetails
Check escalationBefore buying
New leases (2022+)Should be peppercorn
Demands must be properSpecific format
Don’t ignoreCan lead to forfeiture

Service Charges

Key PointDetails
Must be reasonableCan challenge if not
Major worksRequire consultation over £250
Request informationYour right
Compare estimatesFor value
TribunalAvailable for disputes

Before Buying

CheckWhy
Ground rent termsAvoid doubling
3 years’ service charge accountsSee actual costs
Reserve fund statusAvoid surprise bills
Planned major worksFactor into budget
Management qualityResponsive and reasonable

Understanding these charges before you buy saves problems later. If you’re already a leaseholder and have concerns, know your rights and don’t be afraid to challenge unreasonable demands.

aliases:

  • /mortgages/property-ownership/ground-rent-service-charges-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.

You Might Also Find Useful

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Renting
  2. Shelter — Renting
  3. GOV.UK — Leasehold property