Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi All,


Looking for some advice.


Am looking to sell a Freehold I own and wondering firstly what my obligations are towards a Leaseholder - i.e. whether I am legally obliged to offer it to them before selling to someone else.


Also the value of the Freehold - I've been made an offer but have no idea as to whether it reflects market value or not. There are calculators on the internet but the offer was made on far less detail than is required in the calculators. How did they arrive at even the "ball park"?

Lease give some good basic advice for free on their site - in particular the attached (which is written for leaseholders wanting to enfranchise rather than freeholders wanting to sell, but the same principles apply).


http://www.lease-advice.org/publications/documents/document.asp?item=15

You need to offer it to the tenants even if you do take it to an auction - there is no way out of giving them first refusal. There are surveyors who specialise in freehold valuations (it is a complex calculation)- if the offer that you have been made was by way of a statutory notice you do have a time limit in which to respond and if you don't respond in time making a counter offer then the tenants offer is what you will get! You should therefore take advice quickly. LEASE are good,(and here comes the shameless plug) but you could always try giving my colleague a ring - Suzanne Day at Glazer Delmar solicitors (forum sponsors) - 020 7639 8801 ext 210 - as she specialises in enfranchisement and lease extensions.

Yes, you absolutely need to offer it to the tennents first! You should probably hire someone to do the valuation for you if you're not sure how it works.


It's not a massively complex process, but slightly more involved than womanofdulwich suggests. You need to incorporate a yield rate - which I believe will typically be calculated from other freehold sales in the local area.

wod does this as a profession and the yield rate is usually 5% for flats ( deferred) and the yield on the ground rents is determined by the amount of the ground rent and how often it increases and by how much - 6-7 % is the usual range, but this will not have a huge impact on the value.


Try to get as much info off LEASE as you can. If you can answer the questions I asked and use the above info on yields you can probably see if the ball park is ok by using the LEASE calculator.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Its that time of year again, past Christmas day and late delayed cards are turning up. How late are your cards arriving ?  Last year I had one delivered 4 weeks late. Can that be beaten this year ? 
    • Sadly, a lot of businesses didn't invite reviews on the EDF at that time due to a number of "negative nellies" that would take delight in posting unfavourable comments, often despite never being to the business in question.  No matter how good the place was, some posters would find fault that wasn't there "don't lile the colour of the bidet set in the private bathroom, avocado 😅" Can hardly blame businesses at the time for not wanting reviews on here, thankfully that has mostly changed now.   
    • Was that the Hare Krishna place? I can't remember exactly where it was (or maybe still is) but it was somewhere around Oxford Street.
    • The "for sale" section on this forum lets people offer things for free or cheaply. And the "wanted" section let's people ask for things they want or need, for free or cheaply. There are also existing schemes like Freecycle, and also local  food banks. And there is (or was) a local scheme where you can bring things to be repaired free. I think it is/was based in Nunhead. Isn't that simpler than having a barter system? You might have something to give away, but the person who wants it might not have anything you want. Or have I misunderstood how it works? I can see that offering services free might not fit into existing schemes, but depending on what they were, what would happen if things went horribly wrong eg someone wrecked your house? Sorry if the above sounds very negative. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...