Commonhold explained: What agents should tell buyers and sellers
by Mari Knowles
The reform debate is moving quickly and consumers are increasingly asking what commonhold is, what it changes and what it does not change.
For many years, the practical answer was that commonhold was an alternative form of property ownership which existed in law but rarely appeared in transactions.
It was introduced more than two decades ago, but it has been used only sparingly. According to the government’s Commonhold White Paper fewer than 20 commonhold developments have been built in England and Wales, comprising fewer than 200 units – which explains why many buyers, sellers, lenders and conveyancers have had little direct experience of it.
That position is changing. The Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill, which was announced in this year’s King’s Speech would modernise commonhold and establish it as the default tenure for new flats.
Many leaseholders have reported poor management, rising costs, opaque administration and too little control over the homes they own, and leasehold reform has firmly been on the agenda for the last decade.. But it would be a mistake to tell buyers that commonhold is simply leasehold without problems. It is an entirely different form of ownership and it carries its own responsibilities.
What commonhold is
The simplest explanation is summarised in government guidance: commonhold provides freehold home ownership for flats or other interdependent buildings. Instead of owning property as a leasehold for a fixed period of time, commonholders own their properties as freeholders, indefinitely. A crucial difference is that commonholders jointly have a say in how their building is managed, including the costs and responsibilities that come with this.
Under leasehold, the buyer owns a lease. That lease gives the right to occupy the property for a fixed term, which depreciates with time, subject to an often long list of conditions in the lease. The building itself is owned by a freeholder, who may be an entirely separate entity from the leaseholders. The leaseholder may pay ground rent and almost always a service charges and the lease will normally set out rules on alterations, use, assignment and other matters.
Under commonhold, the unit-holder owns the freehold of the unit. The common parts – such as the structure, roof, hallways, lifts, gardens and other shared facilities – are owned and managed through a commonhold association. The association is a company made up of the unit-holders. Instead of each flat having a separate lease, the commonhold is governed by a commonhold community statement. This sets out the rights and obligations applying to the building and to each unit.
What commonhold is not
For agents, one of the most important points is to avoid describing commonhold as freehold with no strings attached.
A commonhold building still needs to be insured, maintained, repaired and managed and fire safety requirements have to be met. The cost of that work is still borne by the people who benefit from the building.
The difference is that the obligation sits within a collective and equal ownership structure, rather than in the traditional hierarchical landlord and tenant relationship. The commonhold association must budget, collect contributions and make decisions. The commonhold community statement will usually contain rules about what unit-holders can and cannot do: there may be restrictions on alterations, use, pets, nuisance and other matters which are familiar in leasehold buildings.
Neither is commonhold the same as share of freehold. Many flats sold as share of freehold are still leasehold flats, which comes with the rigidity of the lease; a share of freehold does not mean that the lease obligations can be ignored. The flat owner may also hold a share in the company which owns the freehold, but the lease remains central. Commonhold is different because the unit itself is held on a freehold basis and the building is governed through the commonhold structure.
The attraction for homeowners
The main attraction of commonhold is control or autonomy. Many leaseholders are frustrated not only by cost, but by the sense that decisions about their building are made elsewhere. They may have limited influence over managing agents, long-term maintenance, insurance or the timing and cost of major works.
Commonhold is designed to give owners a direct stake in those decisions. It should create a clearer relationship between ownership, responsibility and control. There is no lease ticking down and no ground rent payable to a third-party landlord. The commonhold association should provide a more transparent structure for budgeting and longer-term maintenance.
The proposed reforms also place greater emphasis on forward planning. The model discussed by government includes building reports and reserve funds, so that major works are planned and paid for over time rather than arriving as a sudden demand. That will be attractive to many consumers, particularly those who have had difficult experiences with service charge disputes or major works bills.
The caution for buyers
None of this means commonhold is effortless, because a commonhold building will only function well if it is properly run. Owners need to understand the accounts, the rules, the reserve fund and the condition of the building. They may need to vote, sit on committees or take an interest in management decisions. Apathy, disagreement or underfunding can potentially create problems, in the same way that it does where leaseholders own or manage their freeholds.
While some consumers want autonomy and are willing to engage with the management of their building, others prefer the certainty of a more familiar leasehold structure, particularly if it is well managed and the lease is long, clear and free from onerous terms.
Estate agents should be aware of the way in which this may impact sales. Because commonhold has been rare, some lenders and conveyancers have had limited experience of it. That should improve as the system becomes better understood, but consumers buying early commonhold properties may need to allow extra time for mortgage and legal checks. That is not a reason to be deterred, but it is a reason to be prepared. Commonhold has great potential, but it needs time to develop properly as a tenure.
What agents should check
Agents will need to fairly quickly acquire the necessary knowledge to inform consumers of these differences, advantages and disadvantages, and to spot when specialist advice is needed.
When a flat is put on the market, agents should check whether the property is commonhold or whether it is a leasehold flat with a share of freehold. This would require sight of the commonhold community statement, the commonhold association’s details, current budget information, details of contributions, any reserve fund, any planned works and any known disputes or arrears. If the buyer intends to let the property, carry out alterations or use it in a particular way, the rules should be checked before assumptions are made.
This is where agents can add real value. The reform debate is often political, but the consumer conversation is practical: buyers want to know what they own, what they will pay, who makes decisions, what could go wrong and what documents their solicitor needs to review.
The wider reform question
The current system has produced too many cases in which homeowners have lacked control, clarity or fair routes to redress. Commonhold may well provide a better framework, particularly if lenders, developers, managing agents, conveyancers and consumers all understand how it works.
But a rushed transition may create confusion without proper implementation. Poor communication could leave consumers expecting more from the reforms than the law can deliver. In the meantime, existing leasehold buildings will continue for many years and many leaseholders will need improvements to their current position, whether or not they ever convert to commonhold.
For estate agents, being precise with any advice given in respect of commonhold and also balanced when comparing it to commonhold, will be of most use currently. Consumers will be better served if that distinction is explained early and accurately.
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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Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 166
10:25 AM, 25th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Hypothetically lets flash forward ten years, Commonhold has been around a while and after the initial excitement neighbours are having difficulty collecting service charges from a couple of leaseholders who live abroad, exact whereabouts unknown and rent out their apartments on air b n b. How does some other owner procure that the errant leaseholders cough up because without their service charges and those of the apartments which are in the course of foreclosure and probate there isnt sufficienmt money in the kitty to pay the bills
Member Since March 2017 - Comments: 13
3:31 PM, 25th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
All sounds great but when could I expect this to really take effect , I have 3 flats that have a lease of less than 60 years , If I hold on and not pay the exorbitant lease extension charges will it work for me?
Member Since February 2025 - Comments: 80
4:40 PM, 25th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Reply to the comment left by Steve Guest at 25/06/2026 – 15:31
The draft Bill does not provide for automatic conversion of leasehold into commonhold. It allows the leaseholders of existing flats, as a majority group, to convert to commonhold as part of exercising their right to buy the freehold (but they can also choose to buy the freehold and use the “leasehold with share of freehold” system). So either you pay for an extension of your lease, or you club together with the other flat owners and pay to purchase the freehold, the value of which reflects the value of extending your lease and their leases. You’d need to ask a valuer which one comes with a lower cost, but the solicitor fees for just extending one lease will be lower, as managing a group of buyers is more work.
Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 891
3:26 PM, 26th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
I serve on a couple of committees for social groups, this is very challenging at times – I cannot imagine the chaos of 100 different members with their own idea of how things should work!
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 166
10:08 AM, 27th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Reply to the comment left by Steve Guest at 25/06/2026 – 15:31
if youve let the lwase run down to aroubd 60 years unexpired youvr got to expext the cost to extend it to be around a fifth of the value of the flar with a full length lease the present leguslation came in over thirty years ago ans it would have been cheaper a lot cheaper to do it when the lease was not so short. i think many freeholders are adopting a softer tone in negotiating to extend leases and yout best interests would be well served by trying tp strike a deal. all this stuff about commonhold is pie in the sky. in reality many supporters just want a lease extension without paying the proper price. leaseholders can take ocer management now if they want to and get themselves so organised
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 166
4:47 PM, 27th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
I dont think estate agents should say anything to prospective buyers about commonhold because they cannot possibly tell them accurately how exactly it will work. Estate Agents are bound to give no misdescriptions and doing so can be a trigger offence for a potential banning order under the Estate Agents Act 1979. No one knows how this will work yet
Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 238
9:45 AM, 29th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
My sister owns one of six flats in a large converted grade 2 listed building 3 storeys high with a high roof, essentially on a commonhold basis. It’s a great place but it’s also a nightmare, partly because service charges have not been used to build up a meaningful repair fund. The roof is now well past the end of its useful life and in dire need of replacement, also an expensive job due to its listed status. She’s battling against some of the other owners who have only agreed to temporary repairs and simply refuse to accept that the work needs doing, even though she’s now suffering water ingress. Worse still, these people could afford their share but just don’t want to pay out and refuse to accept even professional judgements about the state of the roof, saying they are just touting for work, which is causing a great deal of friction with people that she has previously had a good relationship with.
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 166
9:51 AM, 29th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Reply to the comment left by Peter Merrick at 09:45
Great posting which identifies exactly the propblem with Commonhold. People will be content to re-emulsion the lobby but will shirk away from doing more important and much costlier work such as a wholly new roof. Your sister is a prisoner of the tyranny of the majority against fulfilling work within the landlords covenant. I dont know how the legislation will work – no one does, but if she was a leaseholder with a share of the freehold she could seek an order against the freeholding company to renew the roof. Hopefully the legislation will include some kind of provision that the Commonhold Association must comply with the recommendations of a fully competent building surveyor. This whole exercise will probably result in blocks goign round in a giant circle with rot setting in over the years of dawdle and delay whilst those in the group prevaricate rather than proceed with works which objectively are overdue. I would also expect to see more exclusions under insurances for losses where Commonhold Associations are leaving buildings in disrepair
Member Since April 2021 - Comments: 43
11:25 AM, 29th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Reply to the comment left by Peter Merrick at 29/06/2026 – 09:45
And therein lies the rub. We did an enfranchisement of 29 apartments in the block. 11 did not want to join. We can’t force them. Others had to buy their portion of the freehold. We have a good block managing agent we appointed but I have to manage them on everyone else’s behalf for free. Hopefully not much longer as routine sets in but Commonhold sounds even more of a nightmare. What happens if the top floor flat gets severe leaks due to the rest not coughing up for roof repairs. The whole point of leasehold was to have a system to look after the building and have written procedures and regulations to cover what needs to happen. It’s not so much the leasehold that is the problem, its getting good block management companies who work in your best interests and constantly look to reduce costs and plan ahead. But it requires participation from normally apathetic owners.