Leasehold Service Charge Dispute Guide UK 2025 — FTT Appeals & Reasonableness
Leaseholders pay service charges to their landlord or managing agent for maintaining communal areas, buildings insurance, and major works. Under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, service charges must be reasonably incurred and the work must be of a reasonable standard. If you think you are being overcharged, you can challenge the charge at the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber).
Service charges must be reasonably incurred (LTA 1985 s.19). FTT (Property Chamber) determines reasonableness: fee £100–£350. Section 20 consultation required for major works over £250/leaseholder. 18-month rule: charges over 18 months old may be irrecoverable. Leasehold Advisory Service (LEASE): free advice at lease-advice.org or 020 7832 2500.
The Reasonableness Test
Service charges are only recoverable if they are reasonably incurred and the services or works are of a reasonable standard (Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, s.19). The First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) applies this test to disputed charges. Common grounds for challenge include:
- Works not carried out or not needed
- Works carried out to a poor standard
- Costs grossly exceeding market rates (comparative quotes are powerful evidence)
- Management fees disproportionate to services provided
- Buildings insurance placed with a provider paying commissions to the landlord without disclosure
- Administration charges not permitted by the lease
Key Leaseholder Rights Under LTA 1985
| Right | What you can request | Landlord deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Summary of service charge costs (s.21) | Summary of costs for the preceding 12 months | 1 month |
| Inspect documents (s.22) | Inspect and copy supporting documents | Within 6 months of summary |
| Written summary of insurance (s.30A) | Insurer, sum insured, premium, risk covered | 21 days |
| Recognised tenants’ association | Consultation rights on managing agents | Ongoing |
Failure to provide the summary within 1 month is a criminal offence. If a landlord refuses to allow inspection, you can apply to the county court for an order compelling disclosure.
The Right to Manage — How It Works
RTM gives qualifying leaseholders the right to take over management of their building without buying the freehold or proving fault. Requirements: at least two-thirds of flats must be residential leaseholders with leases of more than 21 years; at least 50% of those leaseholders must participate; the building must not be a converted house or have a resident landlord. The process takes around 6 months and costs approximately £1,000–£3,000 in legal fees for the RTM company formation and notice service.
Frequently Asked Questions
You can challenge the reasonableness of service charges before or after paying them, but withholding disputed charges carries risks. If the charges are ultimately found to be reasonable and you have not paid them, you may face forfeiture proceedings (though forfeiture for service charge arrears requires specific procedures and court involvement). A safer approach is to pay under protest in writing while simultaneously applying to the FTT, or to seek agreement with the landlord to hold the disputed amount in escrow pending resolution.
Yes. The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 introduced significant changes including: stronger rights to information about service charges; requirements for landlords to provide standardised service charge accounts; changes to the litigation costs regime; and enhanced transparency requirements for buildings insurance. Many provisions are being phased in through secondary legislation. The Leasehold Advisory Service (LEASE) publishes up-to-date guidance on which provisions are in force.