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Property Service Charges 2025-10-30
30 October 2025
Lead MP
Rebecca Paul
Debate Type
General Debate
Tags
EconomyTaxation
Other Contributors: 38
At a Glance
Rebecca Paul raised concerns about property service charges 2025-10-30 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.
How the Debate Unfolded
MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:
Lead Contributor
Opened the debate
The debate focuses on the issue of excessive property service charges, particularly in leasehold properties managed by companies like FirstPort. Rebecca Paul highlighted cases of residents struggling with high and increasing service charges, unable to sell their homes due to these costs, and facing difficulties such as late payment fees and lack of transparency from management companies. She emphasised the need for regulation to address the power imbalance between property managers and leaseholders.
Jim Shannon
DUP
Strangford
Jim Shannon agreed with Rebecca Paul, highlighting similar issues in his constituency where residents face difficulties due to high service charges, unexpected cost increases, poor communication, and lack of transparency from management companies. He emphasised the need for itemised service charge bills.
Sam Carling
Lab
North West Cambridgeshire
Sam Carling agreed that a critical issue is the lack of communication leading to residents being charged late payment fees without proper notification, causing financial stress and difficulties for leaseholders. He emphasised the importance of addressing this issue.
Mark Francois
Con
Rayleigh and Wickford
Mark Francois provided context from his constituency experiences with FirstPort management issues, suggesting that offshore ownership drives aggressive revenue-seeking behavior without adequate service quality. He highlighted challenges in regulating property service companies to protect leaseholders.
Samantha Niblett
Lab
South Derbyshire
Samantha Niblett suggested pressing the Government for legislation to help existing residents tied into high service charge arrangements, while also preventing new such arrangements. She highlighted South Derbyshire's decision to ban new property management fees.
Bobby Dean
LD
Carshalton and Wallington
Mr Dean supported Ms Paul's call for radical solutions, declaring an interest in his role with a right-to-manage company. He agreed that people do not want to pay for significant works under commonhold, leading to potential problems.
Justin Madders
Lab
Ellesmere Port and Bromborough
Mr Madders congratulated Ms Paul on her speech and discussed the ongoing legal cases related to leaseholds. He urged the Minister to instruct local authorities not to accept estate management arrangements in planning applications and to legislate for banning them on new developments. He emphasised the need to protect those already caught in the trap and warned about mis-selling practices.
Katie Lam
Con
Weald of Kent
Residents across Weald of Kent are facing steep and unexplained increases in service charges, slow maintenance responses, lack of transparency. Constituents in Yalding faced a 70% fee increase with no clear explanation; Marden saw no maintenance for months despite repeated chasing; Tenterden's home values fell due to high fees.
Honiton and Sidmouth
Residents are being charged fees even before the estate has been handed over from the developer to the property management company, causing distress and legal threats.
Fleur Anderson
Lab
Putney
Leaseholders across Putney face unjustified service charge increases, poor communication, substandard services. The average annual service charge in my constituency rose to £2,300; one constituent faced a 416% increase from £1,600 to £6,660 per year.
Lee Pitcher
Lab
Doncaster East and the Isle of Axholme
Supports progress on protecting leaseholders from unjustified service charges but calls for prompt secondary legislation, professional standards for managing agents, fixing major works regime, and making redress fast and affordable. Advocates clear pre-sell disclosure, sensible reserve planning, and safeguards against avoidable spikes.
Gagan Mohindra
Con
South West Hertfordshire
As a member of the Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee, highlights the issue in his constituency with FirstPort managing Penn Place. Residents face increasing service charges without communication from the company, leading to financial and emotional pressure on them.
Sam Carling
Lab
North West Cambridgeshire
The Member expresses concern over soaring bills, deferred maintenance, and lack of transparency in service charges. He cites a case where a £4,600 charge increased to over £9,000 due to opaque accounts and poor management practices. Carling also describes other issues such as inadequate maintenance, poor communication, and financial mismanagement by managing agents. He calls for mandatory regulation of managing agents and supports the commonhold reform Bill.
The Member questions Sam Carling about the challenges in adopting roads due to financial constraints faced by local councils. She highlights the issue of responsibility between developers, councils, and residents regarding unadopted roads within new developments.
Al Pinkerton
LD
Surrey Heath
The Member discusses cases from his constituency where leaseholders face rising service charges, poor management practices, and lack of accountability. He cites a 75% increase in managing fees at Mytchett Heath since 2019, with no clear justification given to residents.
Chris Hinchliff
Ind
North East Hertfordshire
Describes property service charges as an unjust issue facing constituents, noting that 5 million people are trapped in a broken system leaving them beholden to companies with little accountability. Highlights cases of residents paying high fees for poor services and stresses the need for reform towards commonhold ownership.
Lewis Cocking
Con
Broxbourne
Compliments Rebecca Paul's efforts in securing debate, describes challenges faced by leaseholders including lack of information provided to new residents and significant service charge increases. Criticises management companies for poor services despite high charges and particularly criticises Labour-run Enfield council for demanding large sums from leaseholders.
Andrew Snowden
Con
Fylde
Asks whether transferring flood risk liability to a management company will cause further problems, highlighting an example in Fylde where construction issues led to flooding risks that could exacerbate future challenges for residents.
Lewis Cocking
Lab
Enfield Southgate
Fully supports the right to buy and agrees on the need for transparency and better regulation in leasehold management. Emphasises the importance of abolishing ground rent and implementing commonhold, but recognises it is not a solution for everyone.
Meg Hillier
Lab
Hackney South and Shoreditch
Acknowledges good communication as important but points out that the tension between leaseholders and council tenants stems from Margaret Thatcher's government introducing the right to buy. Highlights the need for better transparency.
Julie Minns
Lab
Carlisle
Expresses constituents' frustration with excessive service charges and lack of accountability from managing agents, calling for enforceable standards for transparency and redress mechanisms. Supports actions taken by previous and current governments but urges further reforms.
Daniel Francis
Lab
Bexleyheath and Crayford
Describes constituents' struggles with rising service charges, poor communication from managing agents, and examples of excessive or unexplained charges. Supports clearer standards for managing agents and regulation to empower residents.
Joe Powell
Lab
Kensington and Chelsea
Highlights the impact of escalating, unaccountable service charges on leaseholders in his constituency, advocating for improved transparency and accountability in the system to protect residents from unfair practices.
Anna Dixon
Lab
Shipley
Anna Dixon agreed with Rebecca Paul, mentioning similar issues faced by elderly residents in her constituency. She advocated for licensing and stronger regulation of managing agents such as FirstPort.
Joe Powell supported the need for mandatory professional standards and a right to veto property agents, hoping for accessible thresholds that work for areas with many overseas or absent owners. He also discussed the government's progress on leaseholder protections and the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024.
Dave Robertson
Lab
Lichfield
Dave Robertson thanked Rebecca Paul for bringing up this issue, focusing on difficulties faced by residents in Roman Heights estate. He highlighted irregular billing practices, lack of transparency and poor management services from managing agents such as FirstPort.
Leigh Ingham
Lab
Stafford
Leigh Ingham agreed with Dave Robertson's call for increased transparency and regulation in property service charges. He discussed the difficulties his constituents faced when trying to use legal mechanisms like section 21 requests under the Landlord and Tenancy Act.
Gareth Snell
Lab/Co-op
Stoke-on-Trent Central
Gareth Snell supported Dave Robertson's point about updating old Acts of Parliament. He highlighted issues with local authorities not adopting properties due to strict planning requirements that conflict with their operations.
Pam Cox
Lab
Colchester
Pam Cox discussed the distress caused by property service charges in Colchester, citing examples from Orchard Gardens and other developments managed by FirstPort. She highlighted overcharging, poor services, and a lack of accountability for managing agents.
Noah Law
Lab
St Austell and Newquay
Highlighted disparity in property service charges. Mentioned a constituent facing a 65% increase in monthly service charge, illustrating the impact of unchecked inflation. Emphasised lack of transparency, oversight, and accountability within the sector.
Meg Hillier
Lab/Co-op
Hackney South and Shoreditch
Declared an interest as a leaseholder herself. Discussed mixed experiences with property management companies in her constituency. Raised concerns about insurance costs and difficulty obtaining coverage, suggesting need for clarity on the relationship between insurers and managing agents.
Gideon Amos
LD
Taunton and Wellington
Critiques the feudal system of leasehold, citing high service charges that have tripled in just three years. Advocates for an independent property regulator to establish a code of practice, licensing managers and setting minimum qualifications. Urges government action on capping unreasonable service and estate management charges.
James Cleverly
Con
Braintree
Acknowledges the significant impact of leasehold issues on constituents' lives and supports cross-party agreement on the need for further reform. Recognises the progress made by his party in government but admits there is more to be done.
James Cleverly
Con
Braintree
The right hon. Member for Braintree emphasised the need to resolve mixed ownership types within blocks of properties, acknowledging that this is not a political issue but a practical one requiring cross-party collaboration. He also highlighted the importance of implementation and delivery rather than just debating.
Rebecca Paul
Con
Redhill
The hon. Member for Redhill opened the debate, emphasising the need for cross-party unity on addressing leaseholder issues in England, urging practical solutions rather than grandstanding and encouraging the Government to implement the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 quickly.
Epsom and Ewell
The hon. Member for Epsom and Ewell provided a case study of a resident whose charges rose significantly, leading to financial burdens and difficulties in selling their property. She called on the Minister to crack down on rogue developers and estate management companies, capping unreasonable service charges and abolishing ground rents on existing leases.
Joe Powell
Criticised poor enforcement of tribunal judgments regarding service charges and called for stronger measures to protect leaseholders from unscrupulous managing agents.
Gareth Snell
Raised concerns about the performance of managing agents, particularly referencing FirstPort, and asked for detailed feedback on why tribunal judgments are not being enforced in specific cases.
Leigh Ingham
Joined other Members in raising concerns about the enforcement of tribunal judgments and called for action to address the issues faced by leaseholders due to rising service charges.
Government Response
The Minister for Housing and Planning acknowledged the cross-party consensus on leasehold issues and committed to honouring Government manifesto promises. He detailed plans to consult on legislative measures to reduce private estate management arrangements, empower homeowners with material information during property transactions, and implement new consumer protections for residential freeholders. The Minister acknowledged the financial strain on leaseholders due to rising service charges and stated that overcharging through service charges is unacceptable. He discussed recent consultations aimed at increasing transparency in service charges and protecting leaseholders from disproportionate legal expenses. The Minister also committed to further engagement with Members as reforms are implemented.
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