The law on service charges is grossly unfair | Letters

The law on service charges is grossly unfair | Letters

Leaseholders have little or no control over service charges – the system needs urgent attention, writes Chris Wallis.

While your editorial on leasehold reform (29 January) is right to say that action on ground rents is long overdue, as is the abolition of leasehold altogether, and that the right to manage is a key part of leaseholders taking control of their buildings, it misses a key point: the law around service charges is archaic and deeply unfair.

As it currently stands, unless they manage their buildings themselves, leaseholders have little or no control over what service charges are issued, and while the law says they are entitled to see the accounts, managing agents frequently either fail to supply them or do so in a form that does not, quite literally, add up. Forensic accountants would have a field day. And legally, leaseholders are obliged to pay these charges and then challenge them, usually at the first-tier tribunal, where the precedent is that as long as the charges are necessary, ie the work is necessary, and reasonable, ie the cost is reasonable, they have to be paid. The reason for the charge arising in the first place is irrelevant.

Continue reading…   

​ 


Discover more from Stay Updated Finance News

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Author: admin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *