2026 Reform Bill: Major proposed changes for leaseholders. Read Guide →
US Buyer Guide

What Is Leasehold Property in the UK? A Guide for Americans

Reading time: 9 min·Updated July 2026·LeaseVault Editorial Team

📚 US Buyer Guide — Full Series

→ UK Leasehold for Americans: The Complete Guide → What Is Leasehold Property in the UK? → Leasehold vs Freehold: US Translation Guide → How Much Does a Lease Extension Cost? → Share of Freehold Explained → Ground Rent Explained → UK Property Buying Process for Americans → London Property Taxes for Americans

If you are an American looking at London flats on Rightmove or Zoopla, almost every listing says "leasehold." This word has no equivalent in US real estate law — and misunderstanding it can cost you tens of thousands of pounds. This guide explains exactly what leasehold means, how it works, and what to watch for before you buy.

The Short Answer — and Why It Matters

TEST CLUSTER BOX

📚 US Buyer Guide — Full Series

→ UK Leasehold for Americans: The Complete Guide → What Is Leasehold Property in the UK? → Leasehold vs Freehold: US Translation Guide → The 80-Year Lease Rule Explained → How Much Does a Lease Extension Cost? → Share of Freehold Explained → Ground Rent Explained → UK Property Buying Process for Americans → London Property Taxes for Americans

When you buy a flat in England or Wales, you almost certainly buy it as leasehold. This means you own the right to occupy the property for a fixed number of years — not the property itself outright. A separate party called the freeholder owns the land the building stands on, and the building structure itself.

Leasehold is not renting. You pay a purchase price, you own an asset you can sell, and you can pass it on. But your ownership is time-limited, and above your ownership sits a freeholder with real legal power over your property.

In the US, when you buy a condo, you own it outright — the unit, a share of the common areas, and a proportional claim to the land. The homeowners association is made up of you and your neighbours. You elect the board. You approve the budget. In UK leasehold, the freeholder is a completely separate commercial party. They do not answer to you. They can charge you ground rent for the right to exist in your own building. Their managing agent sets your service charges. And if your lease runs low, your property loses value fast.

UK Property Ownership in One Comparison
FeatureUS Condo (Fee Simple)UK Leasehold Flat
What you ownUnit + share of land, permanentlyRight to occupy for a fixed term
Who owns the landYou (collectively)The freeholder — a separate party
Annual land feeNoneGround rent (banned on new leases post-2022)
Building managementHOA — you elect the boardFreeholder sets charges; you can challenge
Time limit on ownershipNone — permanentYes — lease term, originally 99–999 years

What Leasehold Means for Your Day-to-Day Life as an Owner

Most of the time, leasehold is invisible. You live in your flat, you pay your mortgage, you pay your service charge (which covers maintenance, insurance, and building management — equivalent to HOA dues), and life goes on. The freeholder is a background figure.

The friction surfaces in specific situations:

  • When you want to make alterations — most leases require freeholder permission for structural changes, installing a new kitchen, or sometimes even redecorating common areas. There is typically an admin fee for consent.
  • When you want to sublet — many leases require freeholder consent to rent out your flat, plus an annual registration fee of £50–£200.
  • When you want to remortgage — lenders check the remaining lease term at every remortgage. If it has dropped below their minimum threshold, they will not lend until you extend the lease.
  • When you want to sell — buyers' solicitors scrutinise the lease. A short lease, an onerous ground rent clause, or an upcoming major works charge will reduce your buyer pool or your price.
  • When you want to extend your lease — you have a statutory right to do this, but it costs money calculated using a specialist valuation methodology. The shorter the lease when you extend, the more you pay.

The Freeholder — Who They Are and What Power They Have

The freeholder of your building could be almost anyone. Common examples include: a private individual who bought the freehold as an investment, a property company or fund that owns the freeholds of many buildings, a pension fund or insurance company holding the freehold as a long-term income-producing asset, or — in the best case — a residents' company in which the flat owners themselves hold shares (called share of freehold).

The freeholder's powers include: setting and collecting ground rent, appointing and overseeing the managing agent, setting and administering service charges, granting or refusing consent for alterations and subletting, and in extreme cases (which are heavily regulated) pursuing forfeiture of the lease for serious breaches.

The 2026 Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill proposes to significantly curtail freeholder powers — including abolishing forfeiture entirely. But this is not yet law. See our Reform Tracker for the latest status.

Ground Rent — What It Is and Why It Matters

Ground rent is an annual fee paid to the freeholder for holding the lease. You receive nothing in return — it is purely a financial acknowledgement of the freeholder's ownership of the land. It is separate from your service charge, your council tax, and your mortgage.

On leases granted before 30 June 2022, ground rent can range from a nominal £50/year to £500 or more, with clauses that double it every 10 years in the worst cases. The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 banned ground rent on new leases — all new residential leases must now have zero (peppercorn) ground rent. But most of the London resale market predates 2022.

Full detail: Ground Rent Explained for American Buyers.

Lease Length — The Number That Changes Everything

The remaining years on your lease is the single most important number in leasehold property. It determines:

  • Whether a mortgage lender will lend on the property
  • How much the property is worth relative to similar long-lease flats
  • How much it will cost to extend the lease
  • Whether marriage value applies — the biggest single cost cliff in UK leasehold

A flat with 150 years remaining on its lease is broadly equivalent to freehold for any practical purpose. A flat with 72 years remaining is significantly discounted, potentially unmortgageable without an extension, and faces a large marriage value cost if you want to extend. The 80-year threshold is a hard legal cliff: one day below it, marriage value kicks in. Full detail: The 80-Year Lease Rule Explained.

Statutory Rights — What American Buyers Are Entitled To

Despite the freeholder's power, UK leaseholders have strong statutory rights under the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993. These apply equally to American buyers:

  • Right to extend your lease by 90 years (proposed 990 years under the 2026 Bill) and reduce ground rent to zero — regardless of whether the freeholder agrees
  • Right to collectively purchase the freehold with other leaseholders — removing the freeholder entirely
  • Right to challenge unreasonable service charges at the First-tier Property Tribunal
  • Right to Manage — taking over building management without buying the freehold

These rights cannot be contracted away by the freeholder. They are statutory — written into law — and available to every qualifying leaseholder regardless of nationality.

What to Do Before You Make an Offer

Before offering on any UK leasehold flat, confirm these five things with your solicitor:

  1. The exact remaining lease term — not the original term
  2. The annual ground rent and whether it contains an escalation clause
  3. The service charge for the last three years and the reserve fund balance
  4. An estimate of the lease extension premium if the lease is under 90 years — use our free calculator for an instant estimate
  5. Whether the building has share of freehold — the most buyer-friendly structure

Want the complete picture before you buy?

Our full US buyer guide covers every aspect of UK leasehold in plain American English.

Read the Complete US Buyer Guide →

🇺🇸 American buying a UK flat?

The American's Guide to Buying a UK Leasehold Flat

30 pages. Ground rent, the 80-year rule, marriage value, stamp duty, US tax reporting and the 2026 reforms — all in plain American English.

Frequently Asked Questions

Leasehold property means you own the right to occupy a flat for a fixed number of years — typically 99 to 999 years originally — while a separate party called the freeholder owns the land and building structure. You pay ground rent to the freeholder for holding the lease, plus service charges for building maintenance. Unlike US condo ownership, the freeholder is a separate commercial party, not your collective association.

No. Leasehold is a form of ownership — you own your flat and can sell it, sublet it (subject to lease terms), and pass it on. You are not a tenant in the conventional sense. However, your ownership is time-limited to the lease term, and when the lease expires the property reverts to the freeholder unless you extend it.

In a US condo, owners collectively own the building through a homeowners association and elect its board. In UK leasehold, a separate freeholder — often a private company — owns the land and building above you. The freeholder sets service charges and ground rent without needing your approval. You have statutory rights to challenge unreasonable charges, but the governance structure is fundamentally different.

Ground rent is an annual fee paid to the freeholder simply for holding the lease. It is separate from service charges and council tax. On leases created before June 2022 it can range from £50 to £500+ per year and may contain escalation clauses. New leases from June 2022 must have zero ground rent.

Yes. There are no nationality restrictions on buying UK leasehold property. Americans must pay a 2% non-resident SDLT surcharge on top of standard stamp duty rates. If the property is a second home, an additional 5% surcharge applies. As an American buyer you have the same statutory rights as UK buyers — including the right to extend your lease and participate in collective freehold purchase.

When a lease falls below 80 years remaining, the cost of extending it rises sharply because a concept called marriage value becomes payable. Marriage value is 50% of the uplift in combined property value created by the extension. Most mortgage lenders also require at least 80 years remaining. If you buy a flat with less than 80 years on the lease, budget for an immediate and expensive extension.

Get Free Leasehold Updates

We'll notify you when key 2026 reform provisions take effect — including marriage value abolition and the ground rent cap.

✓ Subscribed!
Calculate My Premium → US Buyer Guide → ← All Articles

Free Calculator

Estimate your lease extension premium instantly using RICS methodology.

Calculate Now →

Important Notice

General information only. Not legal advice. Consult a RICS surveyor and specialist solicitor before acting.

Free Updates

Get Leasehold Reform Alerts

We'll notify you when 2026 Act provisions come into force, new rates are published, and key decisions are made.

No spam. Unsubscribe any time.
✓ Subscribed!