12/05/2026
What is the difference between a freehold and a leasehold property?
• Freehold means you are the owner of the property and the land it sits on outright, forever, with full maintenance liability
• Leasehold means owning the right to occupy a property for a fixed term via a lease agreement with a landlord, usually for flats, often requiring service charges and ground rent costs.
• Freeholders own the building and land outright. Leaseholders own the property for a set time (e.g., 99 or 999 years), but not the land or building structure.
• Freeholders pay no ground rent or service charges. Leaseholders pay annual service charges, ground rent, and potential major work fees to the freeholder.
• Freeholders have freedom to make alterations (subject to planning). Leaseholders often need permission for alterations and must follow lease covenants (e.g., no pets, no sub-letting).
• Freeholders handle all repairs. Leaseholders usually only handle the interior, while the freeholder manages building repairs.
• Also, it is important to know that Leasehold property value can decrease, as the lease shortens, specifically when under 80 years, making it harder to sell or mortgage
What about you? What would be your preferred choice, having a property on a freehold or leasehold?
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Approved by The Openwork Partnership on 30/03/2026
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