Understand what leasehold enfranchisement means, your rights under UK law, and the two main routes: lease extension and freehold purchase.
Leasehold enfranchisement is the legal process that allows leaseholders in England and Wales to either extend their lease or purchase the freehold of their property. With over 4.9 million leasehold homes in England, understanding enfranchisement could be worth tens of thousands of pounds to you.
If you own a leasehold flat or house, you do not own the land your property stands on. You have a right to occupy it for a fixed number of years — the lease term. When that term expires, ownership reverts to the freeholder unless you have taken action.
Over 4.9 million homes in England are leasehold properties. Understanding enfranchisement could be worth tens of thousands of pounds to you.
Lease Extension: Flat owners can add 90 years (990 years once the 2024 Act is fully in force) on top of their current lease, with ground rent reduced to zero (peppercorn). Under the 1993 Act this is a statutory right you can exercise without the freeholder's consent.
Collective Freehold Purchase: Where at least half of qualifying leaseholders in a building collectively buy the freehold, becoming their own freeholder. Once achieved, leaseholders can self-manage the building and extend individual leases at minimal cost.
The shorter your lease, the more expensive it is to extend and the harder it is to sell or mortgage. The critical milestone is 80 years. Below this threshold, "marriage value" applies and can double or triple your premium. This makes acting early one of the most important financial decisions a leaseholder can take.
Every month below 80 years that passes costs you more money. Marriage value is payable at 50% of the uplift in combined value. Act before crossing this critical threshold.
For a flat worth £300,000 with 75 years remaining, the premium might be £8,000–£15,000. With only 65 years remaining, this could rise to £25,000–£40,000. Professional fees — your solicitor, your surveyor, and the freeholder's costs you must pay — typically add £3,500–£6,000 on top.
The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 extended the standard extension to 990 years, plans to abolish marriage value, and removed the two-year qualifying period. Many provisions require secondary legislation before they come into force. Always check lease-advice.org for the current status of each change.
We'll email you when 2024 Act provisions come into force and when new premium rates are confirmed.
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Calculate Now →This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Always consult a specialist solicitor and RICS surveyor before taking any action.
We'll notify you when 2024 Act provisions come into force, new rates are published, and when landmark Tribunal decisions affect your premium.