Feature image: Calder Valley CLT
We have now submitted our Network’s response to the Government’s 2026 consultation Moving to commonhold: banning leasehold for new flats. Our network-wide response calls for continued exemptions for community land trusts ethically using leasehold.
In February 2026 the government published a new consultation with a proposed approach to introducing a ban on the use of leasehold for new flats. This would make the reformed commonhold model the default tenure for new flats.
Although commonhold seems like it aligns with the aims of community land trusts – preventing land speculation, protecting wildlife and habitats, and preserving land – commonhold owners are responsible for voting only in their own interest. A CLT goes further in acting in the best interests of the whole community – and they do it by making ethical use of leaseholds to provide and protect affordable homes in perpetuity. This means that a blanket move to commonhold could risk or complicate the operations of many CLTs.
As our CEO, Tom Chance, wrote in a recent article for the Red Brick blog, “Leasehold is the legal mechanism that makes the Community Land Trust model work. Without an exemption for CLTs, the draft Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Bill risks unintentionally undermining one of the few proven models for permanently affordable, community-controlled land and housing.”
Alongside support from Kate Gould (legal advisor at London CLT) our CLT Network CEO, Tom Chance, has created a network wide consultation response. CLT Network members were invited to shape this response and share their experiences from the ground.
Here is our final submission to the Moving to commonhold consultation:
We have successfully campaigned for protections for CLTs ethically using ground rents in the Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 and the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024. We are optimistic that our government will continue to support CLTs’ ethical use of leasehold.
We are very grateful to our community land trust network members for feeding their thoughts and experiences into our advocacy work and this consultation response. A special thanks to Kate Gould for generously partnering on this response and sharing her legal expertise.
