Open Letter: Minister of State for Housing & Planning


Shared Ownership Resources logo

To: Matthew Pennycook, Minister of State for Housing & Planning

Date: 27 May 2026


On 20 May 2026, the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG) published a Leaseholder toolkit.

MHCLG describes the aims of the toolkit as:

  • Building awareness, understanding and confidence in the changes being introduced by the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 (LFRA) and the draft Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill, and
  • Looking ahead to future changes for leasehold.
  • Setting out what these reforms mean for leaseholders, freeholders and those involved in managing residential buildings, with clear guidance on rights, responsibilities and next steps.


However, there is a notable absence from the toolkit. There is no mention of shared ownership. And the omission is hard to understand. As Shared Ownership Resources stated in written evidence to the Public Bill Committee scrutinising the draft Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill in 2024: “Shared owners currently have fewer rights, more burdens and weaker consumer protections than residential leaseholders more generally”.

Shared Ownership Resources calls upon MHCLG to publish a Leasehold toolkit for shared owners so they are fully informed about how reforms will make shared ownership “fairer, more transparent and more secure”, and are aware of the extent of “their new rights”.

There are currently over 250,000 households in shared ownership homes in England. The vast majority purchased short 99-year leases as a direct consequence of guidance issued by Homes England and the Greater London Authority (GLA) and related model lease terms. Inside Housing reports ‘Multiple examples of shared owners being given 99-year leases by housing associations, while market sale buyers on the same development were given 125-year or 999-year leases’.

In 2021 we told the Public Bill Committee scrutinising the draft Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill that complex ownership structures (S106) exacerbate barriers to lease extension. In such arrangements housing provider landlords may themselves only have a short interest in the lease.

We welcomed your statement, in November 2024, in which you said: “We must correct an omission that would deny tens of thousands of shared ownership leaseholders the right to extend their lease with their direct landlord given that the providers in question do not have sufficiently long leases to grant 990-year lease extensions”.

However, in a report published today, Pre-legislative scrutiny of the draft Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill, the Housing, Communities and Local Government (HCLG) Committee says: ‘The draft bill does not contain measures to address the flaws identified, nor does it tackle the omission affecting shared owners’.

Shared Ownership Resources calls upon MHCLG to provide details, in a Leasehold toolkit for shared owners, precisely how their rights to lease extension will be improved and delivered under proposed reforms, and when such reforms will take effect.

In evidence to the HCLG Committee in March 2026, Shared Ownership Resources raised concerns about the impact of the 10-year initial repair period (IRP) on fair collective decision-making in commonhold associations.



The HCLG Committee recommends that: ‘government must urgently clarify the circumstances in which shared ownership providers will exercise the vote of a shared ownership property – either by publishing draft regulations alongside the final bill, or by publishing a statement which sets out the “specified purposes” under which shared owners may not have a vote during the 10-year initial repair period’.

Shared Ownership Resources calls upon MHCLG to provide details, in a Leasehold toolkit for shared owners, how flaws in draft legislation relating to the 10-year initial repair period (under the ‘new model’ for shared ownership) will be resolved.

In 2024, Shared Ownership Resources told the Public Bill Committee scrutinising the draft Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill that shared owners should not be excluded from ground rent reforms intended to benefit residential leaseholders.



In March 2026, we raised concerns with the HCLG Committee about whether a proposed £250 cap would apply to shared owners. “The proposed cap is intended to protect people from paying unregulated and unaffordable ground rent. However, if ground rent paid on a landlord’s share in equity is exempt from proposals in the draft Bill, this would create a two-tier system disadvantaging shared ownership leaseholders”.

Shared Ownership Resources calls upon MHCLG to provide details, in a Leasehold toolkit for shared owners, whether or not they will be exempted from reforms to ground rent which benefit residential leaseholders more generally.

In March 2026, we raised concerns with the HCLG Committee as to whether complexities associated with Older Person’s Shared Ownership (OPSO) Extra Care homes would be adequately dealt with under proposed new legislation.



Shared Ownership Resources calls upon MHCLG to provide details, in a Leasehold toolkit for shared owners, on how complexities relating specifically to Older People’s Shared Ownership (OPSO) Extra Care will be dealt with under new legislation.


Shared Ownership Resources logo


HCLG CommitteePre-legislative scrutiny of the draft Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill

MHCLGLeasehold toolkit

2 Comments

  1. Karen Edwards
    June 3, 2026
    Reply

    Thank you so much for continuing to represent the interests of shared owners who may not have the knowledge, skills and ability to do so individually. This is really appreciated (on behalf of my daughter).

    • Sue
      June 3, 2026
      Reply

      Thanks, Karen. Appreciate you taking the time to comment, and your kind words.

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