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Survey finding

Ground rent escalation clause: what it means and what to do

Serious

Onerous ground rent clauses created the post-2017 leasehold scandal and still affect existing leases granted before 30 June 2022. This page covers what to look for, lender stance, and reform context.

Last updated: 6 May 2026. Editorially reviewed: 20 May 2026.

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Finding

Ground rent escalation clause

Serious

What this usually means

Ground rent escalation clauses raise the leaseholder's annual ground rent over time, most commonly by doubling every 10, 15, or 25 years. The 2017 leasehold scandal exposed many onerous ground rent terms that made flats and houses unsellable. The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 capped ground rent at a peppercorn (effectively zero) on most new long residential leases granted from 30 June 2022, but pre-existing leases retain their original terms.

Why it matters

Onerous ground rent (specifically doubling clauses on shorter cycles than 25 years) makes properties hard to mortgage and harder to sell. Lenders' criteria vary. Many builders have offered deeds of variation to convert doubling clauses to RPI-linked or fixed amounts; the offer is usually time-limited and worth confirming.

Ask your surveyor

  • Check:The surveyor does not assess ground rent. This is a conveyancer's read of the lease.

Ask the seller

  • Check:What is the current ground rent and how does it escalate?
  • Check:Has a deed of variation been offered or completed?

Next steps

  • Get two written quotes from local trades before negotiating with the seller.
  • Speak to your mortgage broker before exchanging if the finding affects mortgageability.

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What you need to know

Severity

4/ 5

Serious. Lender and insurer involvement likely; structural or specialist remediation.

Typical cost to fix

Deed of variation to convert ground rent: typically £500–£1,500 in legal fees plus the freeholder's premium (varies hugely). Lease extension under the Leasehold Reform Act 2024 will reset ground rent to peppercorn once valuation rates commence.

Mortgage impact

Mainstream lenders are increasingly cautious about ground rent above 0.1% of property value or doubling clauses on cycles shorter than 25 years. Some lenders refuse outright; others require a deed of variation before drawdown.

Insurance impact

No direct impact, ground rent is a freeholder/leaseholder financial term, not an insurance variable.

When to pull out

Pull out if ground rent terms are onerous, the freeholder will not vary, and the lender refuses.

When to renegotiate, and by how much

Ask the seller (or developer if recent build) to fund a deed of variation. If unavailable, consider a lease extension under the 2024 Act once valuation rates commence, this resets ground rent to peppercorn.

Thinking of pulling out or renegotiating? What to do after a bad survey

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Short lease (under 80 years) , often sits near ground rent escalation clause on a survey and is the next thing to check.

Editorial review

Editorial owner: BiteRight Ltd, operator of MyPropertyScan. We review buyer guides against UK public property datasets, RICS survey wording, lender requirements, and common buyer questions.

Pages are updated when source coverage, property-risk guidance, survey cost assumptions, or product checks materially change. Methodology and dataset limitations are explained on the MyPropertyScan methodology page.

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