The Building Safety Act 2022 and associated regulations introduced a certification process to determine the liability of both landlords and leaseholders for the costs of remedying relevant defects, i.e. how much of these costs can potentially be charged to leaseholders via service charges.
In this guide we explore the definition of a qualifying lease, highlight which costs aren’t recoverable from leaseholders and whether there any other limitations on recovery. We also consider other options available to landlords facing significant remediation costs.
Most of the protections only apply to qualifying leases. In summary, a lease is a qualifying lease if:
Most residential flat leases will fulfil (1) – (3) above, but the information required in respect of point (4) is only likely to be available to the landlord once the leaseholder has produced a leaseholder deed of certificate.
Remediation costs incurred since 28 June 2017, that are recoverable from leaseholders with qualifying leases, are subject to a cap based on location and the value of the lease (calculated in accordance with the legislation) as at 14 February 2022:
Property Value |
Greater London |
Rest of England |
£325,000 to £1 million | £15,000 | £10,000 |
More than £1 million but less than £2 million | £50,000 | £50,000 |
More than £2 million | £100,000 | £100,000 |
Service charges which include remediation costs are also capped annually to an amount not exceeding one tenth of the above permitted maximums, which potentially spreads the cost for leaseholders with qualifying leases over a 10 year period.
Yes, where a landlord defaults in the certification process, e.g. fails to provide a landlord certificate within the requisite time frame, the above protections may apply to leases that would not otherwise qualify.
Also, once the landlord has taken all required steps to obtain a leaseholder deed of certificate but where a leaseholder fails to provide one, the lease will lose protection and will be treated as a non-qualifying lease regardless of its actual status.
Local authorities, registered providers of housing and some other public bodies are exempt from the net worth assessment, i.e. the contribution condition.
Service charge caps are modified in respect of shared ownership leases.
A landlord may potentially have a claim against any third party responsible for the defects, e.g. the original developer, and the legislation imposes obligations on the landlord in this respect. Further guidance on this can be found here.
The legislation modifies the service charge regime in respect of recovering remediation costs. However, the normal rules in relation to recoverability and consultation etc otherwise apply.
This article has been produced as an overview only and does not fully reflect the detail and complexity of the Building Safety Act and associated regulations relating to the recovery of service charges. For further information and advice, please contact the property disputes team.
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