Statutory Lease Extension Services
Clear, practical and commercially focused guidance for leaseholders extending their lease in England and Wales.
What Is a Statutory Lease Extension?
A statutory lease extension allows a qualifying leaseholder to extend the term of their lease under the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993.
For flats, this usually gives the leaseholder an additional 90 years on top of the existing lease term and reduces the ground rent to a peppercorn.
This can protect the value of the property, improve mortgageability and avoid the increasing cost and risk associated with a shortening lease.
Why Expert Legal Guidance Matters
The statutory process is technical and deadline-driven. Errors in the notice, valuation, service or response can cause delay, additional cost or, in some cases, the claim to fail.
Our role is to manage the legal procedure, protect your position and work alongside valuers, surveyors, landlords, managing agents and lenders to achieve a successful lease extension.
01
Initial Lease Extension Advice
02
Reviewing the Lease & Title
03
Serving the Section 42 Tenant's Notice
04
Responding to a Section 45 Counter-Notice
05
Negotiating Lease Extension Terms
06
Managing Statutory Deadlines
07
First-Tier Tribunal Support
08
Completing the New Lease
09
Land Registry Registration
10
Assigning the Benefit of a Claim
11
Informal Lease Extension Advice
01
Initial Lease Extension Advice
Initial lease extension advice
Advising on eligibility, lease length, ownership requirements, likely legal process, timescales and the key risks before a statutory claim is started.
02
Investment Planning
Reviewing the lease and title
Checking the lease, Land Registry title, ownership history, landlord details, mortgage entries and any title issues that may affect the lease extension claim.
03
Tax & Accountancy
Serving the Section 42 tenant’s notice
Preparing and serving the formal notice on the competent landlord to start the statutory lease extension process, including coordination with the valuer on the premium to be proposed.
04
Insurance Guidance
Responding to a Section 45 counter-notice
Reviewing the landlord’s counter-notice, advising on admitted or disputed terms and managing the next steps following the landlord’s response.
A statutory lease extension is not simply an administrative exercise. It requires careful legal drafting, accurate notices, strict deadline management and strategic coordination with valuation advice.
Need Advice on a Lease Extension?
Whether you’re considering a statutory claim or have already received an offer from your landlord — we’re here to help you secure a legally effective lease extension that protects your property’s value and gives you long-term certainty.