A direct comparison between leasehold and commonhold

A direct comparison between leasehold and commonhold

Residents reviewing plans outside a modern apartment building illustrating the shift from leasehold to commonhold ownership.
12:01 AM, 21st May 2026, 2 weeks ago 17

Commonhold is an alternative form of property ownership to freehold and leasehold. Whilst commonhold has existed since 2002, it has proved to be hugely unpopular, with only 20 commonhold buildings currently existing in England and Wales.

Perhaps the greatest issue with commonhold, however, is a lack of understanding.

Not all mortgage lenders, for example, will currently lend on commonhold, which can make commonhold unattractive to potential buyers, but as knowledge and understanding increase, this reluctance to accept commonhold will invariably dissipate.

The government’s ambitious plan is to move away from leasehold, making commonhold the default tenure through the introduction of the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill later this year.

The Housing Minister, Matthew Pennycook, however, made it clear in a speech on 29 April that existing leasehold flat owners will not be forced to convert to commonhold, although they will be encouraged to do so where possible.

Leasehold vs commonhold

As for a comparison between the two, the leasehold system is hierarchical; the whole building is owned by a freeholder who then leases, or grants a right to use, individual flats inside the building to a leaseholder.

Each flat has its own lease, which sets out the terms of its occupation. This often includes a requirement to pay ground rents to the freeholder.

The freeholder is often a third party unconnected with the leaseholders, such as an investor or developer.

It is, however, possible for leaseholders to buy their freehold from their freeholder, a process called enfranchisement.

A lease is also what is known as a depreciating asset, because the lease is granted for a fixed number of years.

Therefore, as the lease gets shorter, the flat becomes less valuable.

In some cases, it is possible to extend the lease via a lease extension.

What is commonhold?

The commonhold system is structured differently.

The Commonhold Association, a company owned by the building’s occupants, owns the freehold of the common parts.

Individual units are owned by individual commonholders, under a freehold, not leasehold, tenure. Instead of each unit having a lease, there is one legal document for the whole building, the commonhold community statement.

As there is no lease, a commonhold unit is not a depreciating asset in the way that a leasehold unit is.

Similarities between them

Whilst the two forms of tenure are structured differently, there are several similarities: the building still needs to be maintained, repaired and insured by the freeholder or commonhold association, and the occupants are required to contribute towards the costs of those obligations.

Similarly, both leases and commonhold community statements will typically contain restrictions on how units can be used, such as requirements to obtain consent before carrying out alterations.

Both forms of tenure put in place mandatory sales procedures for when a unit is sold.

Both will therefore have a list of fundamental rights and obligations, which are not tenure specific.

But this is where the similarities stop: the different legal frameworks result in key differences in how rights and obligations are managed in practice.

Take for example, the case of major works being required. In leasehold, there is a prescriptive statutory process involving the service of Section 20 notices.

If there is no reserve fund (a pot of money which leaseholders pay into over a long period of time to pay for one off major works), leaseholders will receive a major works bill, which can be substantial.

The process and the works themselves can be challenged by the leaseholders via the tribunal.

Commonhold associations

By comparison, all commonhold associations must have a 10-year building report which identifies works needed over the course of the next 10 years.

The commonhold associations must hold a reserve fund to pay for the works identified in the building report.

When major works are needed, commonholders will usually be of the upcoming cost and the reserve fund should contain the funds needed to pay for the works.

As a result, the process should feel different from the current leasehold system.

Instead of relying on a formal notice procedure when major works are proposed, commonhold places greater emphasis on forward planning, transparency and collective budgeting through the commonhold association.

The aim is that major works are anticipated, costed and funded over time, rather than dealt with only when they become urgent.

Overall, commonhold affords homeowners autonomy over their building.

For those who are put off from being leasehold because of the lack of control, this can be an attractive prospect.

Which is better?

Professionals are often asked if they think commonhold or leasehold is better.

Currently, there are too few commonholds in existence to answer this question.

Theoretically, if a homeowner seeks autonomy, a more transparent system and fewer regulations, then commonhold is undoubtedly the better model.

Not all homeowners crave autonomy, however, and may prefer the certainty of leasehold.

Time will tell if the government is right in believing commonhold to be the better tenure.

Mari Knowles is a solicitor at Commonhold and Leasehold Experts Limited and a member of ALEP (the Association of Leasehold Enfranchisement Practitioners)


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Comments

  • Member Since October 2013 - Comments: 1657 - Articles: 3

    3:22 PM, 22nd May 2026, About 2 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by Kizzie at 22/05/2026 – 14:24
    Provided it is clear to all owners in a share of freehold block that all costs and responsibilities are shared equally, and that the company will be operated along the same lines as the previous freeholder, there should be no confusion. If you cannot get enough owners to manage the company, then you bring in a management company, but under the control of the owners. That would be the best option with all the regulatory responsibilities and potential for fines.

  • Member Since February 2025 - Comments: 78

    1:07 PM, 23rd May 2026, About 2 weeks ago

    A major problem with commonhold is the way that permanently affordable homes are tagged on as a second thought, by an exemption from the long lease ban. Even shared ownership has to be kept on the leasehold basis within the commonhold system because for some reason it’s been decided that commonhold owners can’t be restricted in who they sell to or at what price. Since all major developments are still required to contribute a proportion of affordable housing, every new scheme will involve some leasehold. Shared ownership tenants pay mortgage, rent on the unbought share, full share of service charges and repairs, and still have to pay to extend their lease term when it gets below 80 years. And if they staircase to 80%, they will find that they have to sell on the open market because no one in housing need will have the deposit required to buy at that value.

    At London CLT we’re hoping ministers will adjust the Bill and allow us to continue our innovation with discounted market sale home ownership. All our schemes have a resident management company and our core staff team train and support the residents with management issues.

  • Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 423

    2:53 PM, 23rd May 2026, About 2 weeks ago

    Reply to Kate Gould
    I understand Commonhold is similar to share of freehold in which each unit holder owns and runs the Residents Management Company RMC)which holds leaseholders titles but not the equity so each leaseholder is their own lessor LL.

    It is not shared ownership and a resident management company is not the RMC nominee trust registered at Companies House owned and run by leaseholders in their other role as shareholders and there is therefore no external Landlord.

    An appointment or termination of a MA contract is only with consent of the leaseholder in role of shareholders.

    All receipts of the RMC belong to the shareholders and so do the debts.

    The leases become 999 years with transfer of the freehold to the RMC and GR a peppercorn.

  • Member Since February 2025 - Comments: 78

    9:20 AM, 26th May 2026, About 1 week ago

    Reply to the comment left by Kizzie at 23/05/2026 – 14:53
    My reference to shared ownership was to shared ownership of individual units, as a means of providing affordable housing.
    Unit leaseholders’ ownership of the freehold either directly or through a company does not automatically turn the unit leases into 999 years.

  • Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 833

    11:24 AM, 26th May 2026, About 1 week ago

    I guess if you move away any money left in the pot stays with the property even if you contributed thousands but the work hasn’t even started.

  • Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 423

    12:03 PM, 26th May 2026, About 1 week ago

    Reply to the comment left by Paul Essex at 11:24
    Paul Essex
    Depends on what lease says but in an RMC as a nominee trust what is paid in for major repairs subject to a Section 20 notice will remain in the Reserve fund in the account of the seller.
    In a trust company the financial assets paid in belong beneficially to that qualifying leaseholder, not the company so conveyancers need to get a sellers up to audited statement of what seller paid in and what is outstanding and what contributions on going for the major works, and again ensure a section 20 consultation was actually carried out, Minutes etc.

  • Member Since October 2013 - Comments: 1657 - Articles: 3

    1:01 PM, 26th May 2026, About 1 week ago

    Reply to the comment left by Paul Essex at 26/05/2026 – 11:24
    Yes, but a buyer will want to know of any scheduled large works, and a seller can use it to negotiate the sale price.

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