
If you’re a director of a Resident Management Company (RMC), you’ll already know that analysing the accounts are part of the role. But it’s very common to feel unsure about the difference between statutory accounts and service charge accounts — especially as both are prepared every year and both relate to the same building/site.
The key thing to know is: they are two completely separate sets of accounts, each with a very different purpose. In this article, we break it all down in plain, easy-to-understand English.
Statutory accounts (sometimes called “company accounts”) are the financial statements that every limited company in the UK must prepare and file with Companies House.
Companies House
HMRC
The company’s shareholders (often the leaseholders themselves)
Statutory accounts show the financial position of the company itself, not the building’s service charge monies.
The statutory accounts usually include:
A balance sheet
A profit and loss account
Notes to the accounts
A directors’ report
They are a legal requirement under the Companies Act. Even if the RMC is “not-for-profit”, the company must still file statutory accounts.
This is where things often cause confusion.
Statutory accounts only include income and expenses belonging to the company, such as:
Accountancy fees paid by the company
Bank interest earned (if any)
Service charge money does not appear in statutory accounts, because it does not “belong” to the company. It belongs to the leaseholders collectively and must be kept separate.
Service charge accounts relate solely to the service charge funds collected from leaseholders to run and maintain the building.
The leaseholders
Managing agents
RMC directors
Sometimes, mortgage lenders or potential buyers (on request)
Service charge accounts are not filed with Companies House.
They show how service charge money has been:
Collected
Held
Spent on the building’s upkeep
Typical expenses include:
Cleaning
Gardening
Repairs and maintenance
Insurance
Utility bills
Reserve fund contributions
Service charge accounts focus on transparency — showing leaseholders exactly where their service charge payments have gone.
Most residential leases require annual service charge accounts to be prepared and shared with leaseholders. They also support good governance, trust and compliance with the Landlord and Tenant Act.
No. Service charge accounts are not about profit. They follow a simple income and expenditure or receipts and payments basis, depending on the lease and the building’s requirements.
The goal is simply to show:
How much service charge was collected
How much was spent
Whether there is a surplus or deficit at year-end
Statutory Accounts
Service Charge Accounts
Required by law
Usually required by the lease
Filed with Companies House
Not filed anywhere; shared with leaseholders
Focus on the company
Focus on the building’s service charge fund
Shows company’s financial position
Shows how service charge money was collected and spent
Includes only company-owned transactions
Includes only service charge transactions held on trust
Often shows £0 activity for RMCs
Always active – buildings have running costs
A common misunderstanding is to assume that service charge money is part of the company’s income. It isn’t. Legally, service charge funds are trust monies, and the RMC is simply responsible for managing them on behalf of the leaseholders.
Mixing the two sets of accounts would lead to:
Incorrect filings
Confusion for leaseholders
Potential issues with compliance
Keeping them separate ensures clarity, accuracy and transparency.
At Qube, we specialise in service charge accounting and support RMCs, RTMs and managing agents with:
Preparation of statutory accounts for filing
Preparation of service charge accounts compliant with lease requirements
Guidance for directors who want to understand their responsibilities
Clear, friendly explanations whenever you need them
Whether your RMC is newly formed or long-established, we’re here to make the accounting side of things simple and stress-free.
Listen to Qube Talk - All things service charge accounting insights.
Rayanne Armand, Partner and Business Development, Qube Accountants
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