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

Service Charge Guide for Flats — What You Need to Know

Complete guide to service charges for leasehold flats. Understand what they cover, how to challenge unreasonable costs, and your rights as a leaseholder.

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Service charges are a significant ongoing cost for flat owners. Understanding what you’re paying for and your rights can save you thousands.

What Service Charges Cover

Typical Components

CategoryExamples
Repairs & maintenanceBuilding repairs, decorating, plumbing
CleaningCommunal areas, windows
UtilitiesLighting for hallways, communal heating
GroundsGardening, landscaping
InsuranceBuildings insurance
ManagementManaging agent fees
StaffConcierge, caretaker, cleaners
FacilitiesLift maintenance, entry systems
Reserve fundSavings for major works

Common Service Charge Structure

ItemTypical Annual Cost
Buildings insurance£200-£600
Cleaning£150-£400
Maintenance & repairs£200-£800
Lift maintenance£100-£300
Management fees£200-£600
Gardening£50-£200
Reserve/sinking fund£200-£500
Utilities£100-£300
Total£1,200-£3,700

How Service Charges Are Calculated

Typical Methods

MethodHow It Works
Fixed percentageEach flat pays same percentage (e.g., 5% of total)
Floor spaceProportional to flat size
Equal shareSame amount per flat
WeightedGround floor pays less for lift, etc.

What Determines Your Share

Factors often considered:

  • Size of your flat (sq ft or sq m)
  • Which floor you’re on (lift usage)
  • Whether you have a garden/parking
  • Specific lease terms

Example:

  • Building costs: £50,000/year
  • 20 flats of equal size
  • Per flat: £2,500/year

Service Charge Tiers

What to Expect by Building Type

Building TypeTypical Annual Charge
Small purpose-built flat (no lift)£800-£1,500
Medium purpose-built with lift£1,500-£2,500
New build with amenities£2,500-£4,000
Luxury with concierge/gym£4,000-£8,000+
Converted house (2-4 flats)£400-£1,200

What Increases Costs

FactorImpact
Lift£300-600 per flat/year
Concierge£500-1,500+ per flat/year
Swimming pool£500-1,000+ per flat/year
Gym£200-500 per flat/year
24/7 security£400-1,000+ per flat/year
Period buildingHigher maintenance costs

Your Rights as a Leaseholder

Right to Information

RightDetails
Summary of costsRequest a written summary
Inspect accountsView receipts and invoices
Challenge chargesApply to First-tier Tribunal
ConsultationMust be consulted on major works over £250 per leaseholder
Change managementRight to manage (with other leaseholders)

Section 20 Consultation

For works costing over £250 per leaseholder:

StageRequirement
Stage 1Notice of intention + describe work
Stage 2Get and share estimates
Stage 3Notice of estimates + 30 days to comment
Stage 4Award contract and explain decision

If not followed: Costs recoverable may be capped at £250.

Section 22 Summary

You can request (in writing) a summary of service charges showing:

  • Costs incurred
  • How costs were calculated
  • Supporting evidence

Landlord must provide within 1 month (or 6 months from accounts completion).

Challenging Service Charges

What Can Be Challenged

ChallengeBasis
Unreasonable costsCharges exceed reasonable amount
Not in leaseCharges not authorised by lease
Poor workmanshipWork not done to reasonable standard
Consultation failureSection 20 not followed
Administration chargesExcessive admin fees

How to Challenge

  1. Informal approach — write to managing agent/freeholder
  2. Request breakdown — detailed cost information
  3. Compare quotes — get independent estimates
  4. Tribunal application — First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber)

First-tier Tribunal

FeatureDetails
Cost£100-£300 application fee
RepresentationCan represent yourself
ProcessHearing or paper determination
TimelineSeveral months
OutcomeBinding decision
AppealUpper Tribunal (limited grounds)

Preparing a Challenge

Before tribunal:

  • Document specific charges disputed
  • Get comparable quotes
  • Review lease terms
  • Gather correspondence
  • Document any defective work
  • Consider legal advice

Reserve/Sinking Funds

Purpose

A reserve fund collects money for future major works:

Typical WorksEstimated Cost
New roof£10,000-£50,000
External decorating£5,000-£20,000
Lift replacement£30,000-£100,000
Window replacement£15,000-£50,000
Communal heating£20,000-£60,000

How It Works

AspectDetails
Annual contributionFixed amount per flat
Accumulates over timeInterest may be earned
Used forMajor planned works
OwnershipHeld on trust for leaseholders
If you sellNot refunded (passes to buyer)

Why Reserve Funds Are Good

Without a reserve fund:

  • Major works require large one-off bills
  • Leaseholders may struggle to pay
  • Works get delayed, building deteriorates
  • Harder to sell (buyers see future costs)

Managing Agents

Their Role

TaskService
Day-to-day managementRepairs, cleaning, contractors
Financial managementCollecting charges, paying bills
AdministrationInsurance, legal compliance
CommunicationUpdates to leaseholders
AGMAnnual meeting organisation

Typical Management Fees

Building SizeAnnual Fee Range
Small (5-10 flats)£150-£300 per flat
Medium (11-25 flats)£200-£400 per flat
Large (25+ flats)£200-£500 per flat

Changing Managing Agents

Options:

  1. Landlord changes — request if poor service
  2. Right to Manage (RTM) — leaseholders take control
  3. Collective enfranchisement — buy freehold, appoint your own

Right to Manage (RTM)

What It Is

RTM allows leaseholders to take over building management without buying the freehold.

Requirements

RequirementDetails
Building typeSelf-contained building
ParticipationAt least 50% of flats
QualificationAt least ⅔ of flats must be leasehold
LeaseholdersMust hold long leases (21+ years originally)

RTM Process

  1. Form RTM company
  2. Invite all qualifying leaseholders to join
  3. Serve claim notice on freeholder
  4. Wait 1 month (unless challenged)
  5. RTM acquires management rights
  6. Appoint your own managing agent

Pros and Cons of RTM

ProsCons
No purchase costStill pay ground rent to freeholder
Choose your managing agentResponsibility for management
Control over spendingMay need professional help
TransparencyTime commitment

When Buying a Flat

What to Check About Service Charges

CheckWhat to Look For
Last 3 years’ chargesTrend of increases
Current year budgetWhat you’ll pay
Reserve fund balanceIs major works funded?
Planned major worksAny upcoming bills?
Section 20 noticesMajor works in progress?
Management companyReputation, reviews
ArrearsDo other leaseholders owe money?

Questions to Ask Your Solicitor

  • What’s the average annual service charge?
  • Are there any major works planned?
  • What’s in the reserve fund?
  • Any disputes or tribunal cases?
  • Who manages the building?
  • What’s been the trend in charges?

Summary

Key PointRemember
Service charges are requiredYou must pay (challenge while paying)
You have rightsInformation, consultation, tribunal
Compare costsResearch similar buildings
Challenge unreasonable chargesFirst-tier Tribunal available
Reserve funds are positiveSpreads major costs
Right to ManageOption to take control

aliases:

  • /mortgages/property-ownership/service-charge-guide-flats/

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