The Regulatory Wrapper - Why some freeholds are becoming toxic liabilities

April 29, 2026
News On the Block

Recent reforms focus on correcting perceived failures in leasehold ownership. Less attention has been paid to how these changes alter incentives, redistribute costs and reshape the economics of responsibility. This article examines how the removal of freehold value is transforming ownership from an income asset into a regulatory wrapper and some of the consequences that follow.

1. The death of the income asset

The effective removal of freehold value is not a technical adjustment. It represents a structural shift in residential ownership that is still being underestimated. What was once an income-producing asset is becoming a regulatory wrapper: a non-economic liability responsible for management, enforcement, compliance, and, in some cases, extensive building safety obligations - all with no meaningful financial return attached.

2. Costs migrate: repricing the flat

The cost of sustaining that wrapper has not disappeared; it has shifted. Increasingly, the value of the asset inside (the flat) will be determined less by location or specification and more by the fixed, non-negotiable cost of keeping the surrounding structure lawful, insurable and marketable. Regulation does not remove cost, it redistributes it.

3. Safety: the cost accelerator

Building safety has accelerated this repricing. Some wrappers now require substantial and ongoing funding simply to protect what sits within them. High value buildings can often absorb these demands; marginal blocks cannot. The result is sharply regressive: uniform regulatory burdens applied to very different economic realities, leaving some assets illiquid, or quietly toxic.

4. Leaseholders seek liability insulation

Market behaviour is entirely rational. Leaseholders will increasingly decline control of a now worthless freehold, preferring professional managing agents, compliance systems and insulation from liability even where this results in materially higher service charges. Control without upside is not empowerment, it is exposure. In practice, the leaseholder’s primary role becomes funding and protecting the wrapper itself.

5. Risk migration: the flight to offshore

The ownership response will naturally follow. Freeholds carrying real legal and regulatory exposure but offering no economic reward will migrate towards thinly capitalised or offshore vehicles. This is not ideological avoidance but basic risk management. Responsibility remains, but incentives to invest or engage diminish.

6. The fault line of defective leases

A further fault line is often overlooked: defective lease structures. Where collection or enforcement mechanisms are weak, the ‘worthless’ freehold becomes an active liability. All the obligations still apply, but the means to fund them do not. Regulation assumes workability - many legacy leases do not provide it.

Conclusion: the repricing of responsibility

Whilst reform may be necessary, treating ownership as a moral problem rather than a question of who pays and who benefits carries consequences. The regulatory wrapper has not removed exploitation or expense, it has redistributed both, unevenly and with increasing visibility. The market is not simply repricing freeholds, but the cost of carrying responsibility itself. That burden now sits squarely with the flat owner. Unsurprisingly, future buyers will gravitate towards buildings where costs are fully costed and properly funded, accelerating fragmentation and offering little relief to owners trapped in poorly run and underfunded buildings.

Mark Wilson, Director, Myleasehold and a member of ALEP (Association of Leasehold Enfranchisement Practitioners)

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