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London Leaseholds - what are the rent/fees ?

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    London Leaseholds - what are the rent/fees ?

    I’ve been just shocked again ( can’t be surprised anymore ) that there is , yet , another rent to pay to own a flat in London – the Leasehold “fee” ..

    Does this rent/fee apply only for properties in London ?

    What will be the average leasehold monthly fee for 1 bedroom flat in London ?

    I’ve found that – http://www.leaseholdguidance.co.uk/site/law

    but it is not giving an idea of this fee.

    #2
    I'd imagine the leasehold would vary considerably depending on whether the flat is in Chelsea or Catford. It's not exclusive to London by the way.

    Comment


      #3
      If you're talking about ground rent, payable by leaseholders to the freeholder, it's usually peanuts, typically of the order £100 per year.

      (But that is for long-established leases, in Edwardian blocks. I don't know if it's a lot more for new builds, but I doubt it.)

      What may be extortionate is service charges, especially if the house has been neglected and needs a massive refurbishment, or is a block with a porter.
      Last edited by OwlHoot; 3 February 2008, 19:48.
      Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
        If you're talking about ground rent, payable by leaseholders to the freeholder, it's usually peanuts, typically of the order £100 per year.

        (But that is for long-established leases, in Edwardian blocks. I don't know if it's a lot more for new builds, but I doubt it.)

        What may be extortionate is service charges, especially if the house has been neglected and needs a massive refurbishment, or is a block with a porter.
        Yes , the ground rent I mean. Jeasus Christ , my friend was giving me a heart attack yesterday , saying that the ground rent can be 50 % of the property - he lives in Kensington in London...

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by 2uk View Post
          Yes , the ground rent I mean. Jeasus Christ , my friend was giving me a heart attack yesterday , saying that the ground rent can be 50 % of the property - he lives in Kensington in London...
          Its ye olde saxon cleverness. Twats are charged extra.

          HTH
          Hard Brexit now!
          #prayfornodeal

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by sasguru View Post
            Its ye olde saxon cleverness. Twats are charged extra.

            HTH
            You call Londoners twats ? Oh dear ..

            Comment


              #7
              I am just going through a lease extension - another massive fee.

              £20k to add 90 years to 67 existing on the lease.

              As the lease diminishes in years the extension fee goes up - less than 70 years then the fee rockets up year on year.

              Extend at your earliest convienience.

              2.5 years ago my quotation was £9k.

              There was also a change in the law - which I won't bore you with.

              Ground rent on a 1920's building 1 bed was 8.59 a quarter with my lease extension has gone up to £232 a year with an instrument to increase it also.

              Ground rent you *have* to pay or you can forfeit your lease and landlords are vultures waiting to pounce.

              A mate of mine de-carpeted a section near his bathroom - his lease required all areas to be carpeted - they made him re-carpet this 1m section and charged him £350 for telling him to do so - or they would obstruct the sale.

              Never underestimate the evilness of landlords.

              This freehold - leasehold business is the stuff of fuedal times - the quicker we are in Europe then this bulltulip is abolished.

              Comment


                #8
                So that means , a leasehold property's price should also be impacted by the current lease expiration date... anyway , thanks very helpful

                Comment


                  #9
                  Suddenly property doesn't look so hot. Maybe the 'asset' isn't one after all. Enjoy the squeeze.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    First place I bought was a flat lease hold bought it with 80 years on the lease the year the law changed regarding lease extension. I didnt know and socilitor never advised me, below 80 years you have to pay something like 50% of what the property would go up in value to increase the lease. I sold with 76 years on the lease, freehold was a tw*t and even charged me £500 for a licience to to sell the flat, each time a sale fell though and I got another buying it was another £500 for a new licience, even charged me £60 to put new double glazing in.

                    I would avoid lease holds if at all possible unless you get a massive lease and some gurantees on the service charge increases. I would never buy leasehold again it was a total nightmare.

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