Strengthening Leaseholder Protections Consultation
The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government and Welsh Government have opened a twelve-week consultation on implementing key measures in the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024. Aimed at enhancing transparency over service charges, tackling unjust litigation costs and overhauling major works rules, the proposals will affect around five million leaseholders across England and Wales.
Policy Background
The 2024 Act introduced wide-ranging reforms to improve leaseholders’ rights. These include a standardised service charge demand form, an annual report setting out building condition, budgets and major works plans, and a future demand notice for costs incurred more than 18 months prior. Landlords will also need court approval before passing litigation costs to leaseholders, and leaseholders gain the right to claim their own costs back.
“It is vitally important that buildings are effectively insured, maintained and managed so they are safe to live in and retain their value,” say Ministers Matthew Pennycook MP and Jayne Bryant MS in their foreword.
Responses will shape regulations on reporting timetables, prescribed content and exemptions—for example, fixed charge retirement homes.
Financial Impact and Transparency
Under the proposals, landlords must issue:
- A standardised initial demand with a clear annual budget;
- A new annual report within one month of the accounting year’s start;
- A reconciliation demand with tables comparing budgets and actuals within six months of year end;
- Future demand notices with estimated amounts and expected payment dates.
Leaseholders will gain extended rights to request documents—up to six years of accounts, fire and safety assessments, insurance contracts and contracts for services—within 28 days, plus a seven-day extension for third-party information. Failure to comply risks a tribunal order and up to £5,000 in damages. Social housing tenants of private registered providers in England will enjoy similar rights under forthcoming STAIRs regulations.
Major Works Regime Reform
The consultation proposes uprating the Section 20 threshold from £250 to £600 per leaseholder (and QLTAs from £100 to £300) to avoid minor repairs triggering lengthy consultations. It seeks to mandate professionally certified asset management plans (AMPs) covering five- to ten-year maintenance forecasts, underpinned by reserve funds managed in trust. Leaseholders would receive AMPs on request and via the annual report. Exemptions for local authorities, fixed-charge retirement properties and small blocks (four units or fewer) are under consideration.
Standardised two-stage consultation notices would include estimated costs, key dates, funding sources (reserve fund versus service charge) and contractor criteria. The Government also invites views on shortening consultation periods from 30 to 21 days and setting a 12-month deadline to start works after consultation.
Professional Qualifications for Managing Agents
In England—and potentially Wales—the Government proposes mandatory qualifications at Level 4 (equivalent to the first year of a bachelor’s degree) for those arranging insurance, managing budgets, overseeing major works and ensuring building safety compliance. A smaller range of Level 3 roles could cover basic duties. Providers would be Ofqual-regulated or equivalent. Three enforcement models are under review:
- Designated professional bodies (e.g. RICS) requiring membership for qualified agents;
- Government-approved redress schemes taking on registration and compliance checks;
- Local authorities enforcing qualification requirements directly.
A 36-month transition period for existing agents—two years for Level 3 roles—is proposed, with grandparenting for those already holding relevant credentials.
Next Steps
The consultation closes on 26 September 2025. Members are urged to respond, especially on costs to business, exemptions for social and retirement landlords, and practical aspects of digital document delivery. Responses will inform regulations ensuring that leaseholders can scrutinise charges, plan for major works and rely on competent agents. Official details and the online survey are at the GOV.UK consultation page.
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