You may have seen these words listed on the property details or on forms from conveyancers, our guide helps you understand the differences.
A freehold property is owned outright including the land on which it is built on, leasehold is a method of owning a property (quite often a flat) for a fixed period of time (known as the term/lease term) but not the land on which it stands. When you own a leasehold property, you are likely to pay a yearly ground rent and normally a service/maintenance charge to the landowner (called the freeholder/landlord).
Here are a few useful facts about leasehold properties:
Leasehold information should be supplied in a standard form, using the Leasehold Information Pack (LPE1). You may hear this called Management or Freeholder pack. It contains information about the management arrangements, service charges and ground rent, who collects them, service charge accounts, the amount held in a sinking fund (money ready for future expenses) and buildings insurance. The replies given in this pack will also confirm if any service charge payments are overdue and if any major works are planned in the next 12 months.
Service charges are normally an annual charge, which you may be permitted to pay monthly. What can be charged is covered in the lease, but it usually covers the cost of general property repairs, buildings insurance, ground maintenance, management fees and covers all communal area costs for example roof repairs or maintaining a shared entrance.
The lease will set out how service charges are calculated, often they are split between the individual leasehold properties. There is usually a set amount put aside to fund any major repairs as and when they are required. If you are buying a leasehold property you should always find out how much the service charge is, when it is payable and how much money is in the service charge fund, as this will act as a buffer if any significant repairs are due.
Ground rent is the rent payable for the land on which your leasehold property stands. If you own a share of the freehold, then you probably won’t pay this. The lease will confirm the amount, if and how will go up over time and when it has to be paid, annually, quarterly or half yearly.