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Do you require a Freehold or Lease Extension Valuation?
Are you, or are you representing, the freeholder or a leaseholder/potential purchaser?
Have any legal notices been served in relation to lease extension or sale/purchase of the freehold?
Your Name
Email
Telephone/Mobile
First Line of Main Address of Leasehold Property to be Valued (do not include flat numbers)
Post Code of Leasehold Property
Name/number of flat (e.g. Flat 1):
How many bedrooms are there in this flat? 1 2 3 4 5 6
Cost of qualifying leaseholder flat improvement works (£)
Qualifying improvement works include addition of a new en-suite bathroom, re-configuration of internal layout to add an extra bedroom or installation of double glazing where it was not present previously. Repairs, or like-for-like replacement of existing features, are unlikely to be considered. Bathroom or kitchen updates, flooring replacement or decoration costs hence generally do not qualify.
Is the property a single, self-contained leasehold house, or a block/converted house containing multiple leasehold flats?
How many bedrooms are there in the house? 1 2 3 4 5 6
How many leasehold flats are there to be valued? 1 *read help hint 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
When a freehold is sold the freehold owner of all flats in the building will normally change. The premium corresponding to the freehold share of each flat must hence be paid for. This is the case even if a flat owner does not take part in the process.
Consequently, for an accurate valuation of the overall freehold, the freeholds of all flats in the building must be valued. Valuation of a single freehold-share is generally only carried out where the leaseholders have already bought the freehold, and a flat which did not originally participate decides to participate at a later date.
There must be at least two residential flats in the building to qualify for statutory freehold purchase (Collective Enfranchisement). In buildings containing only two flats, both must participate in Collective Enfranchisement.
Will this flat participate in the freehold purchase?
When a freehold is sold the freehold owner of all flats in the building will normally change. The premium corresponding to the freehold share of each flat must hence be paid for. This is the case even if a flat owner does not take part in the process. The premium due for non-participating flats will be split equally between the participating flats. Consequently, the more flats that take part, the lower the price per flat to be paid.
Submit your valuation details and proceed to payment and lease upload.