The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 was given Royal Assent on 24 May 2024, and the sector, along with leaseholders, has been eagerly awaiting the implementation of the proposed changes. On 31 January 2025, the first punch was delivered.

The onerous two-year ownership rule was scrapped. Leaseholders are no longer required to wait the dreaded two years to qualify to initiate the statutory lease extension process.

As such during the sale process, conveyancers and agents are not required to overly concern themselves with the requirement of the outgoing seller to serve the section 42 notice, the statutory notice which initiates the statutory process, along with the Deed of Assignment (the mechanism in which the two year qualification is passed to the incoming buyer on completion), or will they?

In truth, the pressure of serving has been, in my view, relaxed, however, it may still, in certain instances, be prudent for an outgoing seller to serve and the benefit passed to the incoming buyer, even now that the two-year ownership rule has been scrapped. The reason is that there are certain delays in registering and updating a title at the land registry.

In such instances, especially if a term is close to 80 years, I recommend past practice is adhered to, and the notice should be served and assigned to avoid any land registry delays and to ensure the notice is served when the term is still above the 80-year mark.

Such practice will remain until the next blow is served, the one we are all waiting on, the abolishment of marriage value.

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