Stephen Morgan MP this week backed new plans to bring justice to constituents affected by the leasehold scandal.
A Labour report released this week includes proposals to cap unfair costs such as ground rents, investigate misselling and save local leaseholders thousands of pounds.
Leasehold ownership, most commonly found in flats, means purchasing a home for the duration of a long lease rather than owning it outright.
Homeowners who purchase a leasehold property are often faced with extortionate charges in the form of ‘ground rents’ or service charges and locked into restrictive contracts which were not properly explained.
New figures show an estimated 43.15 % of homes in Portsmouth South were sold as leasehold last year. Reforms to leasehold promised by the Conservative Government have still not been implemented, two years after they were first proposed.
The plans, set out in a consultation by Labour’s Shadow Housing Secretary, John Healey MP and Shadow Housing Minister, Sarah Jones MP, include a ban on the sale of new leasehold houses and flats.
Leaseholders will be able to buy the full, freehold ownership of their home for 1% of the property value, with ground rents in existing leaseholds capped at 0.1% of the property value, up to a maximum of £250 a year.
Labour’s proposals mean the average household in Portsmouth South would see their annual ground rent capped at £2040 with the cost of buying their freehold reduced to just £204 – according to analysis published by Shadow Secretary of State for Housing today.
Other proposals set out by Labour include:
- A crack down on unfair fees and contract terms, and a right to challenge unfair fees or poor service.
- New rights to empower leaseholders to hire and fire their managing agent, or to take over management of their homes themselves.
- A promise to revitalise commonhold: an alternative to leasehold – forms of which are used successfully across the world.