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

Leasehold vs Freehold Explained UK — What's the Difference?

Understand the difference between leasehold and freehold property in the UK. What you own, the costs, and why it matters when buying a home.

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Before buying property in the UK, understanding leasehold vs freehold is essential. Here’s what you need to know.

The Basics

Freehold

FeatureDetails
What you ownProperty and the land it sits on
DurationForever (indefinitely)
Ground rentNone
Freeholder permissionNone needed — you’re the owner
Typical forHouses

Leasehold

FeatureDetails
What you ownRight to occupy for fixed term
DurationFixed period (e.g., 99, 125, 999 years)
Ground rentAnnual payment to freeholder
Service chargesFor communal areas/building
Freeholder permissionOften needed for alterations
Typical forFlats (almost always), some houses

What You Actually Own

Freehold Ownership

You OwnYou Control
BuildingCompletely
LandCompletely
Airspace aboveWithin limits
Ground belowWithin limits
Any changesYour decision

Leasehold Ownership

You OwnYou Don’t Own
Right to live thereThe land
For the lease termBeyond lease end
Interior of propertyBuilding structure (often)
Right to extendThe freehold (unless you buy it)

Leasehold Costs

Ground Rent

TypeDetails
PeppercornNominal (£0-£10/year)
FixedSet amount (e.g., £250/year)
EscalatingIncreases over time (problematic)
Review clauseLinked to RPI, house prices, or doubling

Escalating Ground Rent Warning

YearDoubling Every 10 Years
Year 0£250
Year 10£500
Year 20£1,000
Year 30£2,000
Year 50£8,000

This can make properties unmortgageable.

Service Charges

What It CoversTypical Cost
Building insuranceIncluded
Communal cleaningIncluded
Lift maintenanceIf applicable
External repairsIncluded
Reserve/sinking fundBuilding fund
Management feesIncluded
Total£1,000-5,000+/year

Major Works

IssueResponsibility
Roof replacementAll leaseholders share cost
External decorationShared
Lift replacementShared
Can costThousands per flat
Section 20 noticeMust be consulted over £250

Lease Length Matters

How Lease Length Affects Value

Lease LengthImpact
90+ yearsMost lenders accept
80-90 yearsSome lender restrictions
70-80 yearsLimited mortgage options
Below 70 yearsVery difficult to mortgage
Below 60 yearsSeverely reduced value

Why 80 Years Is Critical

Above 80 YearsBelow 80 Years
Extension premium onlyPremium + marriage value
“Marriage value”50% of increased value to freeholder
Much cheaperMuch more expensive
Easier to extendComplicated negotiations

Marriage Value Explained

ConceptDetails
What it isValue gain from extending
Below 80 yearsFreeholder gets 50%
ExampleFlat worth £250k short lease, £300k long = £50k gain
Freeholder gets£25k of that gain

Lease Extensions

Your Right to Extend

RequirementDetails
Ownership2+ years
TypeQualifying lease
Extension amountAdditional 90 years
New ground rentPeppercorn (effectively nothing)

Estimated Extension Costs

Current LeaseFlat Value £250kFlat Value £400k
95 years£5,000-10,000£8,000-15,000
85 years£10,000-20,000£15,000-30,000
75 years£25,000-40,000£40,000-60,000
65 years£40,000-70,000£65,000-110,000

These are estimates — actual costs depend on many factors.

Extension Process

StepDetails
1Get professional valuation
2Serve Section 42 notice (formal request)
3Freeholder responds with counter-offer
4Negotiate or go to tribunal
5Pay premium and legal costs
6New lease granted
Timeline6-12 months typically

Buying the Freehold

For Houses (Freehold Purchase)

RightDetails
LegislationLeasehold Reform Act 1967
RequirementLease was originally 21+ years
CostBased on share of freehold value
BenefitNo more ground rent, lease, service charges

For Flats (Collective Enfranchisement)

ProcessDetails
HowGroup of leaseholders buy freehold together
Requirement50% of leaseholders must participate
ThenForm company to manage building
BenefitControl over service charges, ground rent gone
CostShare of freehold purchase + legal costs

Red Flags When Buying Leasehold

Warning Signs

Red FlagWhy It’s Bad
Lease under 80 yearsExpensive to extend
Doubling ground rentCan become unaffordable
RPI-linked ground rentIncreases with inflation
High service chargesCheck what’s included
No reserve fundBig bills when repairs needed
Absent freeholderHard to get permissions
Onerous break clausesUnusual restrictions

Questions to Ask

QuestionWhy
How long is the lease?Below 80 years is problematic
What’s the ground rent and does it increase?Future costs
What are service charges?Annual costs
Is there a reserve fund?For major works
Any planned major works?You’ll pay
How responsive is the freeholder/manager?Day-to-day experience

Recent Leasehold Reforms

Changes Made/Proposed

ReformDetails
Ground rent cap (new leases)Peppercorn for new builds (2022+)
Marriage valueProposed abolition
Standard lease extensionProposed 990 years
CommonholdPromoted as alternative
Freeholder costsReform proposed

Legislation is ongoing — check current status.

Should You Buy Leasehold?

When Leasehold Is Acceptable

SituationNotes
Flat (no choice)Almost all flats are leasehold
Long lease (125+ years)Plenty of time
Low/peppercorn ground rentMinimal cost
Well-managed buildingGood service
Reasonable service chargesTransparent costs

When to Be Cautious

SituationRisk
Lease under 85 yearsExtension costs
Escalating ground rentFuture problems
High service chargesOngoing cost
Leasehold houseUsually unnecessary
Unresponsive freeholderPoor management

Freehold Houses Only?

House TypeRecommendation
Detached/semi/terraceExpect freehold
If leasehold house offeredAsk why, consider carefully
New build leasehold houseControversial, best avoided

Summary: Key Differences

FactorFreeholdLeasehold
What you ownProperty + land foreverRight to occupy for term
Ground rentNoneYes (varies)
Service chargeNoneUsually yes
Permission for changesNoOften yes
Lease to expireNoYes — must extend
Building maintenanceYour responsibilityShared via service charge
Typical propertyHousesFlats

Buying Checklist for Leasehold

CheckDetails
Lease lengthIdeally 90+ years
Ground rentFixed/peppercorn preferred
Ground rent increasesAvoid doubling clauses
Service chargesGet 3+ years’ accounts
Major works plannedCould cost thousands
Freeholder identityResponsive? Professional?
Lease termsAny unusual restrictions?

Leasehold isn’t inherently bad, but understanding what you’re buying — and its costs — is essential. For flats, leasehold is standard; for houses, always prefer freehold.

aliases:

  • /mortgages/property-ownership/leasehold-vs-freehold-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. GOV.UK — Leasehold property