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73 years left on lease
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I am in the process of buying a flat with 73 years remaining on the lease (99 originally). I have never bought a leashold property before and was wondering ears if 73 years is a long enough period to have left on a lease and if I could have problems when I come to sell the flat. Also has anyone ever extended a lease on a property and if so was it expensive and difficult to do.
Any advice would be very much appreciated.
Any advice would be very much appreciated.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you have the right to buy out your ground thus making your property freehold..check it out with your solicitor..as far as i belive,the cost will be nine times the annual ground rent plus legal fees etc. then you would have no worries about the lease..and i belive that the owner cannot refuse to sell it to you!!! :0)
Obviously not all property will be sold with a 99 year lease � my understanding is that this only begins to become a problem once you are selling with less than 20 years � where the purchaser might be looking at the cost of re-newing the lease, or at least taking a hit on the sale price due to the lease shortness, at the time they come to resell. I don�t believe that it is any big deal to re-new a lease, other than money.
Although I have never owned a flat, a far more important consideration is the annual fee, payable to the company/individual owning the freehold for the land. I know many people living in flats who resent paying extortionate fees to management companies for very little.
I would find out how much this is, if you don�t know already � it is rather like council tax, you have no control over the annual increases.
Although I have never owned a flat, a far more important consideration is the annual fee, payable to the company/individual owning the freehold for the land. I know many people living in flats who resent paying extortionate fees to management companies for very little.
I would find out how much this is, if you don�t know already � it is rather like council tax, you have no control over the annual increases.