Your ground rent has doubled or tripled. Or the lease includes an onerous "doubling clause." Here's how to challenge it and protect your leasehold.
The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 restricts ground rent increases and makes "onerous" ground rents challengeable. If your ground rent doubles every 10-20 years (doubling clause), you may be able to challenge it or force a lease variation. Write to your freeholder disputing the increase as unfair under Landlord & Tenant Act 1985. If they refuse, apply to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) for determination. Ground rent relief is available for many leaseholders.
The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 transformed leaseholder protections:
This is a major shift. Many "ground rent traps" that made leases worthless are now challengeable.
Doubling Clauses are the most onerous. If your lease has a clause that your ground rent doubles every 10, 15, or 20 years, you almost certainly have grounds to challenge it:
This makes the lease unsaleable and unmortgageable. You have strong grounds to challenge it.
Step 1: Get a Valuation — Hire a surveyor to assess whether your ground rent is "onerous" (typically an increase above inflation or that significantly impacts property value). This cost (£200-£500) is recoverable if you win.
Step 2: Write to Your Freeholder — Request a lease variation or reduction in ground rent under the Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022. State that the ground rent is onerous and propose a fair rate (usually capped at £250/year or less, with no doubling clause).
Step 3: Negotiate (6-8 Weeks) — Give the freeholder time to respond. Many will negotiate rather than face tribunal. Offers of one-off payments (e.g., £5,000 to remove ground rent) are common.
Step 4: Apply to Tribunal (If No Agreement) — If the freeholder refuses, apply to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber). The tribunal can order a lease variation, removing the doubling clause or capping the ground rent.
Apply to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) for a lease variation determination. The tribunal can order the freeholder to vary the lease, removing or reducing the onerous ground rent. Tribunal applications cost around £100-£200 in fees and can succeed even if the freeholder refuses negotiation.
Yes, if you own 50%+ of the building (collective enfranchisement) or if your lease is short and expensive. Enfranchisement removes ground rent but is expensive (typically £5,000-£15,000). Lease variation is usually faster and cheaper.
Yes. Keep paying while you challenge. Failure to pay gives the freeholder grounds to forfeit the lease. However, if you win the tribunal case, you may be able to claim repayment of overpaid ground rent.
Tribunal application fees are around £100-£200. Solicitor costs vary (£500-£2,000). The freeholder typically pays tribunal costs if you win. Negotiate a settlement directly — many freeholders offer to reduce ground rent for a one-off payment (£2,000-£10,000) to avoid tribunal costs.
Leases with doubling clauses are extremely hard to sell (mortgage lenders often refuse). Challenge the ground rent immediately — a tribunal determination or negotiated reduction can restore saleability and value to your property.