The cost of indecision: When waiting for leasehold reform becomes a liability

The cost of indecision: When waiting for leasehold reform becomes a liability

Business professional discussing the financial risks of delaying leasehold reform decisions
12:01 AM, 28th July 2025, 9 months ago 27

Many leaseholders today find themselves sitting on a financial time bomb. Not because of economic turmoil or interest rates, but due to a simple decision – they waited. They waited for reform. The promises began in 2018 by the Law Commission – a bold vision of easier, cheaper lease extensions, abolition of marriage value, and sweeping changes to the system. The messaging was clear: big changes are coming!

And so, as is clearly evidenced by the decline in lease extension activity, many did nothing. In the background, some advisers echoed that view hinting at potential savings. Why pay thousands today when the law might be about to change? From a distance, that felt like the prudent choice.

Fast forward to 2025. Reform has happened – well, sort of. We have Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 (LAFRA), which was rushed through in the final hours of the last government. But it hasn’t settled the key valuation questions, such as how a ground rent is to be capitalised or what deferment rate applies to a landlord’s reversion. These key inputs remain in flux and more consultation is expected. Furthermore, with a Human Rights challenge being heard over the proposed abolition of marriage value, even if the landlords win, what about an appeal?

Meanwhile, the cost of delay for flat owners has quietly mushroomed.

How the cost builds

Lease extension premiums increase by 5% each year, which is compounded. And that’s even before marriage value applies. A flat with 86 years left in 2018 will now have 79 years. This is a dangerous threshold for flat owners who decided to wait because once a lease falls below 80 years, the calculation changes: marriage value kicks in, immediately adding around 4% of the flat’s value to the premium. And each year thereafter, the proportion of marriage value grows as the lease term reduces – and that’s in addition to the 5% compound annual increase.

This is not just academic, it is playing out in real life. The table and graph is prepared by myleasehold. Based on statutory valuation methodology, per £100,000 of long lease value, it shows the rise in premium:

Years Delayed Years Remaining Cost Without MV (£) and % Increase Cost With MV (£)
0 85 1,600
1 84 1,680 + 5.00%
2 83 1,760 + 10.30%
3 82 1,850 + 15.80%
4 81 1,940 + 21.50%
5 80 2,040 + 27.60
6 79 2,140 + 34.00% 5,630
7 78 2,250 + 40.70% 5,940
8 77 2,360 + 47.70% 6,250
9 76 2,480 + 55.10% 6,560
10 75 2,600 + 62.90% 6,880

Graph: lease extension costs with and without marriage value

This shows the difference in lease extension premiums between 80 years (£2,040 per £100,000) compared to 79 years (£5,630 – an increase of 253%) and 76 years (£6,562).

A classic example

Take, for example, a flat in Fulham worth £500,000 with an 85 lease five years ago. The lease extension premium (excluding ground rent) would cost £8,000 then; today premium cost £10,200. This is an increase of almost 30%. The flat owner was advised to wait for reform, and the lease is now just above the critical 80-year point. Extend today, and it just escapes the added cost of marriage value. Wait another year, and the premium leaps. The risk? Missing the deadline and facing a £20,000 increase, overnight. And to top it off, lenders are increasingly wary of short leases, so the leaseholder is left with a less marketable and less mortgageable asset. Flat owners just don’t seem catch a break.

The reform illusion

There is a bigger issue here: belief in reform as a guaranteed win. Many leaseholders thought government intervention would produce savings. In truth, the reforms – even if fully enacted – were never going to retroactively rescue those who waited too long. Even if the abolition of marriage value survives the legal challenge, the new regime is not yet active, and we still have the definition of ‘non-onerous ground rent’ still up for debate.

So we are in limbo, and the market doesn’t like that. Buyers apply appropriate discounts to leases under 85 years even up to 90 years. Whilst for leases below 80 years, what is it going to cost to extend (including fees) and what is lost in terms of long lease value?  The value of the property will be impacted by the buyer’s liability to extend, with all the cost and hassle that comes with it. The buyer is taking on the headache – and that comes at a price.

Understanding the real cost

And this is where it is not just about lease extension premiums. It’s also that delay can reduce flexibility. Flat owners lose leverage in sales negotiations, and based on where we stand today, some flat owners risk being trapped in a game of policy roulette, hoping that the next announcement will magically save them money.

What should advisers say now?

If a lease is approaching 80 years, waiting is a high risk strategy and the effect of compounding the premium over an increasing number of years increases the cost and risk. Even for longer leases, the direction is clear – price creeps up each year, and reform is unlikely to reverse that. Many leaseholders think they are saving money by waiting but maybe they are just compounding the cost and increasing complexity.

Final thoughts

Reform was meant to bring clarity and fairness. Instead, it has delivered delay, uncertainty, and rising costs. For those who acted early – extended their leases and moved on – they are sitting with stronger assets and greater control. Those who waited, and many have, are paying for the privilege. Hope has proven not to be a lease extension strategy.

Mark Wilson is the Director of Myleasehold and a member of ALEP (Association of Leasehold Enfranchisement Practitioners).


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Comments

  • Member Since January 2020 - Comments: 134

    4:55 PM, 5th August 2025, About 8 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 04/08/2025 – 17:18
    Here’s another question!

    I’m presuming that the company articles will require the ground rent to be distributed annually to shareholders in the freehold company?

    The alternative would be holding it within the company, but then complications when a leaseholder sells his flat along with his share.

  • Member Since October 2013 - Comments: 1630 - Articles: 3

    7:28 PM, 5th August 2025, About 8 months ago

    I would set the ground rents to peppercorn (zero) and extend all leases to 999 years for all share of freehold leaseholders (after a vote, of course). Then distribute the ground rents equally to them.

  • Member Since January 2020 - Comments: 134

    9:37 AM, 6th August 2025, About 8 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 05/08/2025 – 19:28
    What is the benefit of extending to 999 years if leaseholders control the freehold?

  • Member Since October 2013 - Comments: 1630 - Articles: 3

    3:47 PM, 6th August 2025, About 8 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ian Cognito at 06/08/2025 – 09:37I understand what you’re asking, and TBH, very little. None of us will see the benefit of such a long lease, unless we’re Dorian Grey, but if a buyer had the choice of a property with 120 years lease and one of your freeholders with 999 years, guess which one he’s more likely to buy. Of course, the reality is the share of freehold is likely to be the deciding factor.
    But if it won’t cost you anything, you may as well do it for those who have invested in the freehold purchase.

  • Member Since January 2020 - Comments: 134

    4:16 PM, 6th August 2025, About 8 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 06/08/2025 – 15:47
    Thanks Yorkie.

    I’ve been told indirectly (i.e. not from solicitor) that extending to 999 years at the time of purchasing freehold will be £700+ per leaseholder.

  • Member Since January 2020 - Comments: 134

    9:47 AM, 22nd August 2025, About 8 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 06/08/2025 – 15:47Good morning Yorkie.
    I have received quote from solicitor for extending lease to 999 years immediately after purchase of freehold.
    The cost per tenant is £750 plus VAT or £1,050 plus VAT if the tenant has a mortgage.
    This is on the basis of all 30 tenants (or thereabouts) going ahead, which equates to a total legal bill of around £30,000.
    I don’t know what figure I was expecting, but it wasn’t that!

  • Member Since November 2022 - Comments: 37

    12:15 PM, 22nd August 2025, About 8 months ago

    Purchase the freehold. Then pay a solicitor for one extension of leasehold and replicate all the others yourself = much cheaper.

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