Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Property»UK government caps ground rents paid to freeholders
    Property

    UK government caps ground rents paid to freeholders

    January 27, 20265 Mins Read


    Ground rents paid to freeholders on existing properties in England and Wales are to be capped in a victory for leaseholders that Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer hopes will increase affordability in the housing market.

    Ministers announced on Tuesday morning that the cap would be set at £250 a year for each property, changing to a “peppercorn” rent after 40 years. Peppercorns denote a nominal sum that in effect has zero financial value.

    Leasehold means owning a property for a fixed amount of time, while the freeholder owns the whole building or land. 

    Starmer overruled chancellor Rachel Reeves, who had been concerned about the impact on institutional investors, many of which have large residential property portfolios.

    The government said it expected “to deliver savings for about 770,000 to 900,000 leaseholders during this parliament”. About 490,000 to 590,000 of those leaseholders who pay more than £250 a year are located in London and the south. The legislation could come into effect in late 2028.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    In addition, the government proposes to ban the sale of leasehold flats, as well as the practice of forfeiture. The leasehold flat ban will apply to the purchase of residential homes, the government said. Under a new model, homeowners will get an ownership stake in their buildings and more control over how their buildings are managed.

    About 4mn households pay ground rents in England and Wales.

    The £250 cap, which was first reported by the FT, follows a previous Conservative government crackdown on soaring ground rents on new-build properties. Nicknamed “fleeceholds”, there have been examples of ground rents doubling every 10 years. 

    Some owners have found it difficult to sell their properties or obtain mortgages on them because of the increasing ground rents. 

    Steve Reed, housing secretary, had drawn up the proposals, which were first promised in the Labour general election manifesto in 2024. But Reeves, under pressure from investors who fear that the changes will lower the value of their property portfolios, had been pushing back on the plans for weeks. 

    The Tories passed a leasehold reform act in 2022 that meant new-build ground rents could only be set at peppercorn rates. Another leasehold act in 2024 gave tenants the right to extend their standard leases to 990 years, again on peppercorn rates. 

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    In its manifesto, Labour promised to go further by applying limits to existing houses and flats to tackle “unregulated and unaffordable” ground rent charges. 

    The Residential Freehold Association, which represents 10 of the biggest landlords that together own a total of about 1mn leasehold properties, said the ground rent cap “represents a wholly unjustified interference with existing property rights which, if enacted, would seriously damage investor confidence in the UK housing market and send a dangerous and unprecedented signal to the wider institutional investment sector”.

    The RFA estimates that pension funds have invested more than £15bn in residential ground rents, which are seen as stable, long-term predictable income. It has said that the total value of investment in UK ground rents exceeds £30bn, and that the government should compensate investors that amount.

    The government acknowledged concerns from industry, saying on Tuesday that it chose not to implement an immediate peppercorn cap so as to preserve value.

    Institutional investors have also warned that professional landlords would exit the market and leave crucial building safety and maintenance works unfinished.

    In a statement, asset manager M&G said it was directly exposed to £722mn of ground rent assets and that the proposed changes would lead to an estimated £230mn reduction in the value of the holdings.

    Andrea Rossi, chief executive of M&G, said although the company “supports the government’s objective to strengthen leaseholder protection”, it was “disappointed” that it had “not been able to agree a proportionate solution that works for all parties”.

    M&G added: “These changes, if implemented, would negatively impact savers and companies that have chosen to invest in UK assets; they would also set a worrying precedent, leading to consequences for the UK’s reputation as a stable investment location.”

    Angela Rayner, the former deputy prime minister and housing secretary, intervened last week, urging Starmer to back the proposals. She argued that the government’s own estimates suggested there would only be a minor impact on investors.

    Recommended

    In December 2023, the housing ministry said pension funds held less than 1 per cent of assets in residential property. 

    Ministers had hoped to publish a draft bill implementing the changes in December, but a last-minute Treasury intervention delayed those plans.  

    Earlier this month, Rayner said investors were getting an annual return for “doing absolutely nothing” and could lift ground rents and service charges regardless of the “devastation” caused to tenants. 

    “Labour made a promise to leaseholders that we would fix this injustice, but ministers are currently subjected to furious lobbying from wealthy investors trying to water this manifesto commitment down,” she said.

    Harry Scoffin, founder of campaign group Free Leaseholders, who had called for peppercorn rates, said today’s move was “a sugar rush announcement by a desperately unpopular government”.

    “We are deeply concerned that, despite being a Labour manifesto promise to end the grossly unfair and extortionate leasehold system . . . it is now being propped up by a two-tier approach,” he said.

    “Buyers of future developments will get democracy in the home through commonhold, while those of us already trapped in leasehold will remain in servitude to freeholders.”



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Low-Fee Real Estate Agents Could Save You Thousands. Why They Aren’t They More Popular

    Property

    Salboy launches specialist construction delivery arm to unlock stalled and complex housing schemes across the UK

    Property

    Edinburgh commercial property consultancy acquired

    Property

    Price of average UK home passes £300,000 for first time, Halifax says | Housing market

    Property

    UK property listings rise 7% as supply outpaces demand

    Property

    Four‑bedroom detached property in Brockdish for sale

    Property
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Investments

    GAM Investments et Swiss Re annoncent un partenariat d’investissement

    Investments

    Faut-il craindre une récession aux USA ? – 10/03

    Investments

    Data centres push Asia’s cross-border property investment towards 2-year high

    Editors Picks

    Silver is the new gold after prices rocket 164 per cent in a year: Here’s how YOU can cash in

    January 4, 2026

    Cryptocurrency Live News & Updates : Shiba Inu Faces $100M Open Interest Decline

    July 30, 2025

    Eli Lilly’s trillion-dollar climb exposes Europe’s absence from top ranks of stock markets – The Irish Times

    November 16, 2025

    Hideo Kojima says “no one ever told me” Konami turned down a Matrix game – but maybe there “could’ve been a way to make it work” despite Metal Gear Solid 2

    October 29, 2025
    What's Hot

    Silver Ferns fall to Diamonds after late collapse in Constellation Cup opener

    October 17, 2025

    Husker faculty lead conference honing strategies for national ag data network

    August 13, 2024

    What China’s Commodity Imports Say About Its Economy

    August 14, 2024
    Our Picks

    La fintech britannique Wise s’envole pour Wall Street

    June 6, 2025

    Research into nano-urea can transform our agricultural sector

    May 25, 2025

    ‘Millionaire mandarins’ revealed: the senior civil servants with as much as £2.5 MILLION to look forward to in taxpayer-funded pension pots – while private sector workers face a tax raid on their retirement funds at the Budget

    November 24, 2025
    Weekly Top

    Cryptocurrency Fuels Human Trafficking, Child Abuse, and Online Scams, Report Finds

    February 17, 2026

    A Metal Gear Solid Game Was Delisted From the Xbox Store

    February 17, 2026

    Police arrest three for cryptocurrency fraud

    February 17, 2026
    Editor's Pick

    Texas A&M System Chancellor Sharp named ‘Man of the Year in Texas Agriculture’

    August 22, 2024

    Hero, la fintech qui offre des solutions de financements rapides aux PME

    March 26, 2025

    Savvy Tips on Alternative Investments From a Wealth Adviser

    June 23, 2025
    © 2026 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.