The Act proposes several key changes including (in summary, this list is not exhaustive):
- Increasing the standard lease extension term for houses and flats to 990 years.
- Lifting of the requirement for leaseholders to have owned the property for at least two years before qualifying for a lease extension or purchase of a freehold.
- Removing ‘marriage value’ from the premium calculation for lease extensions.
- Making it easier and cheaper for leaseholders to extend a lease or buy the freehold.
- Making it easier for leaseholders to take over the management of their building – increasing to 50% the amount of commercial space that would prevent leaseholders from accessing the Right to Manage or the right to collective enfranchisement.
- Removing paying for freeholder costs from leaseholders who want to exercise their right to enfranchise. Each party will now pay their own costs.
- Scraping the presumption for leaseholders to pay landlords’ legal costs when challenging poor practice.
- Setting a maximum time and fee for the provision of home buying and selling information.
- Replacing buildings insurance commissions for managing agents, landlords and freeholders with administration fees.
- Ensuring freeholders or managing agents use a standardised format for service charges.
- Requiring freeholders who manage their property to belong to a redress scheme.
- Banning the sale of new leasehold houses other than in exceptional circumstances.
- Granting homeowners on private and mixed tenure estates rights of redress.
The Act also amended elements of the Building Safety Act 2022 affecting the application of cost recovery and remediation orders, and remediation contribution orders for defects. These measures have now been introduced and more information on building safety can be found in Cladding External Wall System FAQs.