Barnet

Lease Extension Valuations - Barnet

Living in Barnet

Own a flat or maisonette in Finchley, Hendon, Edgware, Mill Hill and Golders Green? A shortening lease can affect your property’s value, mortgageability and saleability, while the premium payable can increase significantly as the lease term reduces.

Blakes Chartered Surveyors provides specialist lease extension valuation and negotiation advice for leaseholders, freeholders and solicitors across Barnet. We combine local market evidence with specialist leasehold valuation expertise, helping clients make informed decisions before notices are served, during negotiations and, where necessary, in preparation for tribunal proceedings.

Barnet

Barnet contains a diverse mix of leasehold property ranging from mansion blocks and converted period buildings in Golders Green and Finchley to modern developments in Colindale and purpose-built apartments across Hendon and Mill Hill. Lease extension valuations often differ substantially depending on lease length, property style, service charge structures, ground rent terms and the strength of local comparable evidence across North London.

Our role is to provide clear, evidence-led advice on the likely premium and realistic negotiating range before you commit to a statutory or informal lease extension. We can liaise directly with your solicitor, advise on the premium figure to include within a Section 42 Notice, negotiate with the landlord’s surveyor and help you assess whether a proposed settlement is commercially sensible.

We regularly advise leaseholders, resident management companies and private landlords throughout Barnet, including owners seeking to protect value in highly mortgage-sensitive areas popular with families and long-term owner occupiers. Whether you are planning a future sale, refinancing or extending before marriage value becomes payable, we provide commercially focused advice tailored to Barnet’s varied leasehold market.

Barnet

Why the valuation matters

A lease extension is not just an administrative process. The valuation sets the commercial framework for the claim. If the opening figure is too high, you may weaken your negotiating position; if it is too low, you risk delay, dispute and unnecessary pressure after the landlord’s counter-notice.

Blakes prepares lease extension valuations using recognised methodology, current market evidence and practical negotiation experience. We consider the unexpired term, ground rent, lease structure, relativity, deferment and capitalization rate evidence, local flat values and the likely approach of the freeholder’s surveyor.

 

How Blakes can help

  • Initial review of your lease term, ground rent and property details.
  • Lease extension valuation advice for statutory and voluntary claims for both leaseholders and freeholders.
  • Recommended premium negotiation strategy before notices are served.
  • Negotiation with the leaseholder/freeholder or the leaseholder/freeholder’s surveyor.
  • Advice for leaseholders, freeholders, solicitors and managing agents.
  • Experienced Expert Witness support where a negotiated settlement cannot be reached.
  • Coordination and liaison with your appointed solicitors to ensure a smooth process.
 

Need a lease extension valuation?

Speak to Blakes Chartered Surveyors for a clear view of the likely premium, negotiation strategy and next steps.

Call 020 7373 7373 or email info@blakessurveyors.com to arrange an initial discussion.

Prefer a fully managed lease extension service?

If you would like valuation and legal work handled together, extension.lease brings together Blakes Chartered Surveyors and Arcadia Law in a coordinated end-to-end fixed fee service. This may be the better route if you want one team to manage both the surveying and solicitor stages from start to finish.

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Statutory Lease Extensions

For most qualifying flats, the statutory lease extension route is made under the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993. The current statutory route provides a new lease adding 90 years to the existing term and reducing the ground rent to a peppercorn, subject to qualification and the correct procedure being followed.

The previous requirement to have owned the flat for two years has been removed for qualifying claims made from 31 January 2025. The lease and title still need to be checked carefully, and the premium should be assessed before any notice is served. Because the notice figure can influence the negotiation, we recommend obtaining specialist valuation advice at the outset.

The Lease Extension Process

  1. Initial review and quotation – we review the lease term, ground rent pattern, property type, location and your objectives.
  2. Valuation advice – we prepare an evidence-led valuation and advise on the likely premium range.
  3. Notice strategy – where you use the statutory route, we advise on the premium figure for your solicitor to include in the Section 42 notice.
  4. Landlord counter-notice – the landlord will usually serve a counter-notice stating whether the claim is admitted and what premium they propose.
  5. Negotiation – Blakes negotiates with the landlord’s surveyor to narrow the valuation gap if applicable and seek a sensible settlement.
  6. Agreement or tribunal – if agreement cannot be reached within the statutory timetable, our highly experienced surveyors and valuers can represent you at the First Tier Tribunal.
  7. Completion – once the premium and lease terms are agreed, the solicitors complete and register the new lease with HM Land Registry.
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Looking for a packaged lease extension service?

At extension.lease we make the lease extension process simple, stress-free, and fully managed from start to finish.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • For most qualifying flats, the current statutory route generally gives the leaseholder a new lease adding 90 years to the existing term, with ground rent reduced to a peppercorn for the entire lease term. Informal lease extensions offered by landlords may deviate from the statutory basis and it is not uncommon for existing ground rents to be reserved or shorter lease extensions to be granted.

A brief overview of case studies from the numerous clients who have received support and expertise from Blakes

Lease extensions
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Albany Court, Blundell Road, Watling Estate, Burnt Oak lease extension case study
Albany Court, Watling Estate HA8
A leaseholder instructed us to assist with the lease extension of an ex-local authority flat within the Watling Estate area of Burnt Oak. The remaining term was starting to become a concern, and the aim was to protect the flat's market value, improve mortgageability and make the property more attractive to future buyers.

For leasehold flats in Burnt Oak and the wider Barnet area, a reducing lease term can affect saleability and may lead to higher lease extension costs if left too late. This case study highlights why leaseholders across Watling Estate and nearby HA8 locations should take early advice before a shorter lease affects property value, lender confidence or buyer interest.
Beaufort Park, Colindale NW9 lease extension case study
Beaufort Park, Colindale NW9
A leaseholder in this large modern apartment development instructed us to assist with a lease extension where the main objective was to eliminate ground rent from the lease. The existing ground rent terms were high and increased aggressively throughout the lease, creating concerns around long-term value, mortgageability and future buyer appeal.

By completing the lease extension, the leaseholder was able to remove the ground rent liability and secure a cleaner, more marketable lease structure. This case study highlights why leaseholders in Colindale, NW9 and across Barnet may choose to extend not only to add years to the term, but also to deal with escalating ground rent provisions that could impact saleability or lender confidence.
Chalice Court, East Finchley N2 lease extension case study
Chalice Court, East Finchley N2
The leaseholder of this East Finchley flat came to us because the lease term had reduced and was beginning to affect the property's overall position. A shorter lease can make a flat harder to sell, limit mortgage options and put pressure on value, so dealing with the issue early was important.

By extending the lease, the leaseholder secured a stronger long-term arrangement and made the property more appealing to buyers and lenders. This case study shows why leaseholders in East Finchley and across Barnet should not wait until a short lease starts to create avoidable cost, value or saleability concerns.