Leasehold vs Freehold: What Every UK Homebuyer Must Know
Buying a home is the largest financial decision most people will ever make — and yet thousands of buyers each year sign contracts without fully understanding whether they are purchasing a freehold or a leasehold property, let alone what the distinction means for their finances, their freedom to renovate, and the long-term value of their investment.
The difference is not merely technical. It can cost you tens of thousands of pounds, complicate your ability to remortgage, and even affect whether you can sell the property at all. Before you exchange contracts on any UK property, you need to understand this fundamental divide.
What Does Freehold Actually Mean?
When you buy a freehold property, you own both the building and the land it sits on, outright and indefinitely. There is no time limit on your ownership, no landlord to answer to, and no ground rent to pay. You are, in the fullest sense, the owner.
The vast majority of houses in England and Wales are sold freehold. This means you can make structural alterations (subject to planning permission and building regulations), extend the property, paint the front door whatever colour you like, and pass the asset on to your heirs without restriction. There are no annual service charges unless you live in an estate with shared facilities, and no risk of the property reverting to someone else's ownership.
Freehold is, understandably, the preferred form of ownership. It is simpler, cheaper to maintain over time, and carries fewer legal strings attached. If you are given the choice between a freehold and leasehold version of an otherwise identical property, choose freehold.
What Is a Leasehold Property — and Why Are There So Many?
Leasehold means you own the property for a defined period of time — set out in the lease agreement — but not the land it stands on. The freeholder (also called the landlord) retains ownership of the land and, in the case of blocks of flats, the building structure itself. When the lease expires, ownership reverts to the freeholder unless you act to extend it.
The vast majority of flats in England and Wales are sold leasehold, and this is largely a structural feature of how multi-storey buildings are managed. When several people own separate units in one building, it is legally and practically simpler for a single entity — the freeholder — to own the building and land, with each flat owner holding a long lease.
New-build houses have historically also been sold leasehold, often with escalating ground rents written in, a practice that drew widespread condemnation and ultimately led to legislative reform. The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 banned the charging of financial ground rents on new residential leases in England and Wales, though properties sold before that legislation took effect remain subject to their original terms.
The Hidden Costs of Leasehold Ownership
This is where many buyers are caught off guard. Leasehold ownership carries ongoing financial obligations that freehold does not, and these can be substantial.
Ground rent is an annual charge paid to the freeholder. While the 2022 Act banned new financial ground rents, millions of existing leaseholders still pay them — sometimes with clauses that double the rent every ten or twenty years, effectively making the property unsaleable and unmortgageable.
Service charges cover the maintenance and upkeep of shared areas — the roof, lifts, communal gardens, and building insurance. These are entirely at the freeholder's discretion in many cases, and there is no fixed cap. Charges can run from a few hundred to several thousand pounds per year, and leaseholders can face large, unexpected bills for major works such as cladding remediation or roof repairs.
Permission fees are another irritant. Many leases require you to obtain the freeholder's consent to make alterations, sublet the property, or keep a pet — and freeholders are entitled to charge an administration fee for granting that consent.
Lease extension costs are significant. The shorter the lease, the more expensive and complex the extension process becomes. Crucially, once a lease falls below 80 years, a mechanism called "marriage value" kicks in, meaning the leaseholder must share with the freeholder a portion of the value created by the extension. This can add thousands to the cost. Most mortgage lenders will not lend on properties with fewer than 70 to 75 years remaining, which means a short lease can render a property effectively unsellable to buyers who need a mortgage.
Before you make an offer on any leasehold property, read the lease carefully with a solicitor, check the service charge history for the past three years, ask for any known upcoming major works, and calculate how much lease extension would cost. Resources such as QuidCompare can help you understand the broader financial picture — from comparing mortgage products to getting a clearer view of the costs associated with different types of property purchase.
The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024: What Changed
After years of campaigning by leaseholder groups, the UK government passed the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024, which introduced the most significant overhaul of leasehold law in decades. Key changes for residential leaseholders in England and Wales include:
- The abolition of the two-year ownership requirement to extend a lease, meaning you can begin the process immediately after purchase.
- A standard 990-year lease extension, up from the previous 90 years for flats, bringing greater long-term security.
- The removal of marriage value from lease extension calculations, substantially reducing the cost of extensions on shorter leases.
- Stronger rights to challenge unreasonable service charges through the First-tier Tribunal.
- Greater transparency requirements for freeholders and managing agents around their charges and accounts.
The reforms are welcomed, but they do not eliminate the fundamental complexity of leasehold ownership. They also do not apply retroactively to every clause in every existing lease. Legal advice remains essential.
Practical Steps Before You Buy a Leasehold Property
If freehold is not an option and you are buying leasehold, here is what every prudent buyer should do:
- Check the lease length immediately. Anything below 85 years warrants serious caution. Below 70 years is very difficult to mortgage.
- Review the ground rent clause. Look for escalation terms. Any clause that doubles ground rent is a red flag.
- Request three years of service charge accounts. This gives you a realistic picture of ongoing costs and flags any major works disputes.
- Ask about planned major works. Sellers are legally required to disclose known upcoming works, but ask your solicitor to request a formal letter of enquiry.
- Get a lease extension valuation. A specialist surveyor can give you an informal estimate of extension costs before you commit.
- Investigate the freeholder. A poorly managed or litigious freeholder can make ownership miserable. Search for tribunal decisions involving the property or the management company.
- Budget for service charges as part of your affordability calculation. Do not rely solely on the mortgage repayment figure.
Making the Right Decision for Your Circumstances
The leasehold vs freehold question is not simply about legal ownership — it is about the full cost of your home over the long term, the ease with which you can sell it in the future, and how much control you have over your own living space.
For houses, if you are offered a leasehold you should ask why and explore whether you can buy the freehold either at the point of purchase or shortly after. For flats, leasehold is usually unavoidable, but a well-managed block with a long lease and reasonable charges can still be an excellent investment — provided you go in with your eyes open.
The UK property market is in a period of transition as leasehold reform continues to work its way through the legal system. Staying informed, taking independent legal advice, and doing your due diligence before exchanging contracts is not optional — it is the difference between a sound investment and a very expensive mistake.