Housing Associations: Service Charges

Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government written question – answered at on 30 December 2024.

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Photo of Jim Shannon Jim Shannon DUP, Strangford

To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, what assessment she has made of the implications for her policies of trends in the level of service charges by housing associations.

Photo of Matthew Pennycook Matthew Pennycook Minister of State (Housing, Communities and Local Government)

The government recognise the considerable financial strain that rising services charges are placing on leaseholders and tenants of housing associations.

The level of service charge that leaseholders pay depends on many factors, including the terms of a lease and the age and condition of a building.

By law, variable service charges must be reasonable. Should leaseholders wish to contest the reasonableness of their service charges they may make an application to the appropriate tribunal.

The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 includes measures designed to drive up the transparency of service charges to make them more easily challengeable if leaseholders consider them to be unreasonable.

The government is committed to acting quickly to implement the provisions of the Act. Further detail can be found in the written ministerial statement published on Thursday 21 November (HCWS244).

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