Out-Law Analysis 8 min. read
13 Mar 2025, 4:33 pm
Plans to replace the current leasehold system of flat ownership in England and Wales with a new system built around the commonhold model of ownership, will raise practical issues that residential landlords and tenants, as well as other occupiers of property, will need to consider.
The UK government’s recent white paper proposals mark the latest step in what it said it hoped will be commonhold becoming “the default tenure”, with the government insistent that commonhold will not merely offer an alternative to leasehold ownership but be “a radical improvement on it”. The commonhold proposals form part of a wider package of properly law reforms.
However, as we explore below, shifting to a commonhold model entails new challenges and risks, which require further thought from and action by policymakers and stakeholders in the residential property market.
In its white paper, the government described commonhold as “a form of freehold ownership where individual property owners each own their unit outright, with no expiring term.” It added: “Like leasehold, these units could be flats, a shop, or an office unit. Together, they share ownership of the communal areas through a ‘commonhold association’, which is a company that they are all members of and jointly control. Commonhold is specifically designed to be owned, managed and looked after without the involvement of a third party, so there is no landlord.”
The commonhold association would be a limited company governed by the Companies Act 2006. Its directors would typically be the unit holders themselves and would be subject to the same scrutiny and obligations of any other company directors.
The rules governing the running of the building would be set out in the commonhold community statement (CCS), which is a prescribed form of document, meaning any commonhold development in any part of England or Wales would have the same CCS. The CCS would include many of the provisions typically found in a lease agreement, such as obligations not to carry out alterations without consent, the obligations on the commonhold association to repair, maintain and insure the common parts of the building, and the obligation of the unit owners to pay a service charge.
The CCS can be supplemented by local rules, which would be agreed by the unit owners at meetings of the commonhold association.
The commonhold model, or its equivalents, is in wide operation in a number of countries, including Australia, South Africa, Scotland, the US and Canada. In the UK, the previous Labour government provided for commonhold ownership through the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002. The Act took effect in 2004, but the concept has never taken off.
The politicians say this is due to inertia in the legal community and the greed of landlords who want the ground rents, but a more measured review by the Law Commission of England and Wales in 2020 found that there were a number of real practical barriers to commonhold being adopted. It put forward 121 recommendations for reform. All bar one of those recommendations have been accepted by the government in its white paper in so far as they relate to new developments. The separate question of how existing leasehold schemes are to be converted to commonhold is subject to further consultation.
The Law Commission’s recommendations, and the government’s plans to implement them, reflect practical concerns that developers, lenders and unit holders have about the existing commonhold model.
There is a widespread view that the current commonhold arrangements are only suitable for small, simple developments. To address this and make commonhold suitable for more complex developments, the Law Commission suggested several measures that the government has endorsed. These include:
Lenders have also expressed concern about the commonhold model. The lender’s remedy for non-payment of the mortgage debt will remain repossession, but a commonhold unit is not a lease. Their main concern is around the financial viability of the commonhold association and what its insolvency might mean. A complex raft of changes is proposed to give lenders comfort:
A central aim of the commonhold reforms is to improve the experience of the unit owners – to give them greater control over how their buildings are managed and ensure the interests of homeowners are preserved, as Matthew Pennycook, minister for housing and planning, put it in his foreword to the white paper, “in perpetuity”.
Practical changes to achieve this aim were set out in the white paper. These include:
In relation to the proposals outlined in the white paper, a lot of detailed drafting remains to be done – and soon: the government plans to publish a draft Bill in the second half of 2025 for pre-legislative scrutiny.
The draft Bill, it said, will provide for a commonhold model that is “very different to the model which is in place today”, adding that it will be made “suitable for operation in a much wider range of settings and be a credible replacement for leasehold for new housing”.
The draft Bill will not only seek to implement the recommendations endorsed by government in the white paper, it will also include proposals for converting leasehold tenures to commonhold – details that will be of major interest to existing landlords, in particular.
In tandem with the draft Bill, the government is planning to issue a ban on the sale of new flats on a leasehold basis – something it intends to consult further on later this year. This, it envisages, will further incentivise the shift to commonhold.
Change is coming, and with that there are risks and new potential liabilities to consider – the government is envisaging, for example, that commonhold associations with automatically be the principal accountable person (PAP) for Building Safety Act purposes in respect of ‘higher risk’ buildings. Those are serious obligations that commonhold associations would need professional advice on.
The detail of these reforms will be important, to ensure the property market at large delivers on the needs of people and businesses – and the government too, at a time when it is committed to ensuring 1.5 million new homes are built during the current parliament.
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06 Mar 2025