This type of let is not permitted according to the terms of your lease and short-term lets could be considered a breach of the lease.
Multiple agreements in your lease may prohibit this activity, for instance: that the property may not be used as a place to run a business; or that it has to be occupied by a single, private resident; or that short-term lets may be considered a nuisance.
All lets are to be a minimum of three months (90 days).
It usually takes HomeGround three to five working days to process a sublet request, from the time we receive the completed form and a payment of £75. Depending on the terms of your lease, we will send you a sublet registration document or a sublet consent certificate.
HomeGround do not charge a retrospective fee for sublets. If you have not taken consent before renting out your property, please complete the sublet request process through our website.
If you'd informed your previous landlord about the current tenancy, please send us the documentation so that we can update our records. Should it come to light that this was not obtained, our sublet process will have to be completed.
You have a right to buy your freehold under legislation, if you meet some minimum criteria. These criteria and the procedure to follow, including how your freehold is formally valued, are set out in the Leasehold Reform Act 1967.
You can only purchase your freehold if your property is a house.
You can choose to enter either formal or informal negotiations.
The Leasehold Reform Act 1967 is a detailed piece of legislation that introduced rights for leaseholders of houses to buy their freehold, among other things. It sets out a procedure to be followed by both leaseholders and freeholders.
In relation to buying your freehold, the 1967 Act includes:
Unfortunately, the landlord is not in a position to offer the freehold to individual leasehold flat owners on an informal basis.
However, this does not affect your statutory right under the act to seek purchase of the freehold should at least 50% of the leaseholders in the block wish to do so. Please note that you will need to seek independent legal advice should you wish to proceed this way.
The landlord clients of Homeground Management Limited are willing to enter into informal negotiations with their leaseholders.
You can apply for informal negotiations and pay the administration fee through your personal account on the HomeGround portal. To access your HomeGround account, please sign in. If you need help with your password, please click here.
If you have yet to register on our portal, you will need your alphanumeric security key and your 12-digit customer reference number. These can be found on HomeGround invoices or the welcome letter we sent.
Once an application has been received and the administration fee has been paid, within 3–5 working days Homeground will send you the price at which the freeholder would be willing to sell the freehold. This offer price is always inclusive of the freeholder’s fees and expenses and VAT (if applicable), in other words, there are no hidden extras.
Once you have received this offer price, you can:
Once agreement is reached between you and the freeholder then HomeGround will instruct the freeholder’s solicitors to formalise the matter. We may then need the contact details for your solicitor. While our clients do not require a leaseholder to appoint their own solicitor in order to complete the conveyancing stage of the transaction, if you have a mortgage, your mortgage provider may require you to appoint your own solicitor. We recommend that you contact your mortgage provider to check.
If you and the freeholder are unable to agree a price then you still have the right to buy your freehold by way of formal negotiations.