Property Ownership UK 2026 — Leasehold, Freehold, Ground Rent and Service ChargesService 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.
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
| Category | Examples |
|---|
| Repairs & maintenance | Building repairs, decorating, plumbing |
| Cleaning | Communal areas, windows |
| Utilities | Lighting for hallways, communal heating |
| Grounds | Gardening, landscaping |
| Insurance | Buildings insurance |
| Management | Managing agent fees |
| Staff | Concierge, caretaker, cleaners |
| Facilities | Lift maintenance, entry systems |
| Reserve fund | Savings for major works |
Common Service Charge Structure
| Item | Typical 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
| Method | How It Works |
|---|
| Fixed percentage | Each flat pays same percentage (e.g., 5% of total) |
| Floor space | Proportional to flat size |
| Equal share | Same amount per flat |
| Weighted | Ground 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 Type | Typical 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
| Factor | Impact |
|---|
| 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 building | Higher maintenance costs |
Your Rights as a Leaseholder
| Right | Details |
|---|
| Summary of costs | Request a written summary |
| Inspect accounts | View receipts and invoices |
| Challenge charges | Apply to First-tier Tribunal |
| Consultation | Must be consulted on major works over £250 per leaseholder |
| Change management | Right to manage (with other leaseholders) |
Section 20 Consultation
For works costing over £250 per leaseholder:
| Stage | Requirement |
|---|
| Stage 1 | Notice of intention + describe work |
| Stage 2 | Get and share estimates |
| Stage 3 | Notice of estimates + 30 days to comment |
| Stage 4 | Award 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
| Challenge | Basis |
|---|
| Unreasonable costs | Charges exceed reasonable amount |
| Not in lease | Charges not authorised by lease |
| Poor workmanship | Work not done to reasonable standard |
| Consultation failure | Section 20 not followed |
| Administration charges | Excessive admin fees |
How to Challenge
- Informal approach — write to managing agent/freeholder
- Request breakdown — detailed cost information
- Compare quotes — get independent estimates
- Tribunal application — First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber)
First-tier Tribunal
| Feature | Details |
|---|
| Cost | £100-£300 application fee |
| Representation | Can represent yourself |
| Process | Hearing or paper determination |
| Timeline | Several months |
| Outcome | Binding decision |
| Appeal | Upper Tribunal (limited grounds) |
Preparing a Challenge
Before tribunal:
Reserve/Sinking Funds
Purpose
A reserve fund collects money for future major works:
| Typical Works | Estimated 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
| Aspect | Details |
|---|
| Annual contribution | Fixed amount per flat |
| Accumulates over time | Interest may be earned |
| Used for | Major planned works |
| Ownership | Held on trust for leaseholders |
| If you sell | Not 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
| Task | Service |
|---|
| Day-to-day management | Repairs, cleaning, contractors |
| Financial management | Collecting charges, paying bills |
| Administration | Insurance, legal compliance |
| Communication | Updates to leaseholders |
| AGM | Annual meeting organisation |
Typical Management Fees
| Building Size | Annual 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:
- Landlord changes — request if poor service
- Right to Manage (RTM) — leaseholders take control
- 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
| Requirement | Details |
|---|
| Building type | Self-contained building |
| Participation | At least 50% of flats |
| Qualification | At least ⅔ of flats must be leasehold |
| Leaseholders | Must hold long leases (21+ years originally) |
RTM Process
- Form RTM company
- Invite all qualifying leaseholders to join
- Serve claim notice on freeholder
- Wait 1 month (unless challenged)
- RTM acquires management rights
- Appoint your own managing agent
Pros and Cons of RTM
| Pros | Cons |
|---|
| No purchase cost | Still pay ground rent to freeholder |
| Choose your managing agent | Responsibility for management |
| Control over spending | May need professional help |
| Transparency | Time commitment |
When Buying a Flat
What to Check About Service Charges
| Check | What to Look For |
|---|
| Last 3 years’ charges | Trend of increases |
| Current year budget | What you’ll pay |
| Reserve fund balance | Is major works funded? |
| Planned major works | Any upcoming bills? |
| Section 20 notices | Major works in progress? |
| Management company | Reputation, reviews |
| Arrears | Do 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 Point | Remember |
|---|
| Service charges are required | You must pay (challenge while paying) |
| You have rights | Information, consultation, tribunal |
| Compare costs | Research similar buildings |
| Challenge unreasonable charges | First-tier Tribunal available |
| Reserve funds are positive | Spreads major costs |
| Right to Manage | Option 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.
You Might Also Find Useful