25% of Help to Buy properties sold as leasehold

A new report from www.OkayLah.co.uk, analyses Help to Buy data for thousands of properties since the government scheme began and found that across England, a total of 25% of all properties sold through Help to Buy were done so as leasehold.

Related topics:  Property
Warren Lewis
18th April 2019
SOLD

In London, this hits 82% of all properties on average and in some boroughs, this percentage of homebuyers in the firing line accounts for 100% of all properties sold through the Help to Buy scheme. Outside the capital, an average of 20% of all Help to Buy homes are sold as leasehold, with over 40 areas seeing the number of Help to Buy properties sold as a leasehold exceed 50%. It has been previously highlighted that the government has failed to legally protect homeowners from the leasehold scandal and instead has asked that they come to their own agreements with the freeholders.

However, even if such an agreement is met it can mean drastic increases in ground rent based on ‘outdated measures of inflation and the leasehold owner could also unwittingly: -

• Sign away any right to compensation if firms are found to have mis-sold contracts in the future.
• Still be liable for any huge hikes in ground rents at the freeholder's discretion.
• Be unable to secure a sale should they wish to move
• Get blindsided by hidden charges to own a pet, remortgage or even build a conservatory.
• Have to fork out thousands in legal advice.

Those buying through the Help to Buy scheme, often for the first time, are unaware of the dangers of a leasehold property and the trap they could be getting themselves into.

OkayLah’s data shows that outside of London, the area where most buyers are in danger is Blackpool where 92% of all Help to Buy properties were sold as leasehold. St Albans (91%), Elmbridge (87%), Salford (84%), Bury (81%), Burnley (80%), Epsom and Ewell (79%), Oldham (77%), Stockport (74%) and Bournemouth (73%) are also home to some of the highest levels of Help to Buy properties sold as leasehold.

However, the higher price of property in the capital and the resulting desperation for many to get on the London ladder means that across all London boroughs, at least 77% of properties have been sold as leasehold via the Help to Buy scheme.

In Hammersmith and Fulham, Hackney, Kensington and Chelsea, Camden and Westminster, 100% of Help to Buy properties were sold as leasehold. Southwark (99%), Greenwich (99%), Lambeth (99%), Tower Hamlets (98%) and Richmond were also home to some of the highest level of leasehold Help to Buy property sales.

Paul Telford, founder and CEO of OkayLah.co.uk, commented: “Our previous research highlighted that the increasing demand spurred by Help to Buy coupled with the Government’s failure to build any homes to meet this demand has resulted in property prices purchased through the scheme climbing 27% higher than the average first-time buyer house price.

In their half-hearted attempts to be seen as addressing the current UK housing crisis, the Government has not only inadvertently pushed up the price of starter homes, but with the help of developers selling land on to third parties, they’ve left Help to buy homebuyers high and dry and liable to absorb the debt. fffThis is pretty scandalous and as a result, it’s left many homebuyers in a leasehold nightmare, susceptible to backhanded tactics, below the belt fees and exuberant increases in ground rents by the new freeholder, having already paid more than market price for the property.

It’s impossible to know the true extent of this toxic leasehold practice but when the dust has settled it will be interesting to see if the Government continues to chalk Help to Buy down as a win.”

More like this
Latest from Financial Reporter
Latest from Protection Reporter
CLOSE
Subscribe
to our newsletter

Join a community of over 20,000 landlords and property specialists and keep up-to-date with industry news and upcoming events via our newsletter.