A Section 5A Notice provides qualifying tenants (leaseholders) with their Right of First Refusal offer to purchase the freehold of their building. This particular notice is applicable when freeholders wish to dispose of their freehold interest via a private sale. Private sales can include selling to a specialist freehold buyer or a private individual by way of a contract.
All Section 5 Notices must be prepared and served in accordance with the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987. As such, there are strict rules that must be followed for the Section 5A Notice. Failure to comply can result in a criminal conviction and a fine of up to £5000, so it’s not worth taking chances with these notices if you’re unsure about the procedure and requirements.
Once a Section 5A Notice has been served to qualifying tenants (leaseholders), it is prohibited by law to sell the freehold under different terms within a 12-month period. For example, if the leaseholders do not accept the Right of First Refusal offer, the freehold cannot be sold to another party at a lower price. Furthermore, the landlord’s (freeholder’s) offer is issued on a ‘take it or leave it’ basis, which means that it cannot be challenged and is non-negotiable.
A Section 5A Notice contains the following basic information:
A statement that the notice constitutes an offer by the landlord to enter into a contract on the terms set out in the notice must also be included. As such, it is crucial that Section 5A Notices are served in the prescribed format as dictated by law to protect both the freeholder and leaseholders.
Section 5 Notices only need to be served when the property for sale and the leaseholders (tenants) qualify for the Right of First Refusal.
For the freehold property to qualify, the following requirements must be met:
For leaseholders to qualify under Section 5, the following requirements must be met:
Only if all of the requirements above are met, should Section 5 Notices be served.
Section 5A Notices must be served on at least 90% of the qualifying leaseholders. This legal rule is in place in case some of the leaseholders are untraceable, rather than to provide an opportunity to deliberately omit 10% of qualifying leaseholders.
Qualifying leaseholders have two months from the date on the Section 5A Notice to accept the Right of First Refusal offer. In order to accept, the requisite majority (more than 50% of qualifying leaseholders) must serve a notice of acceptance on the freeholder.
If this acceptance notice is served outside of the two-month period, or not served at all, the freeholder can dispose of the freehold on the open market. However, as noted above, this disposal must proceed on the same terms as those stated in the served Section 5A Notice.
To help you save a whole lot of money and hassle and to guarantee that you are fully compliant with the law, we can prepare and serve Section 5A Notices on your behalf at no cost to you. Our team has extensive experience in assisting freeholders with the Section 5A Notice procedure and can ensure that your freehold sale goes ahead without a hitch.
In most cases, we can prepare and serve your Section 5A Notices within 24-hours of receiving signed confirmation to proceed (subject to having access to the leases and title information). When serving notice, we retain all postage receipts for your file along with all related documentation, so you can rest assured that you have met your legal obligations.
To start the Section 5A Notice procedure or to learn more about our service, complete the contact form and one of our advisors will be in touch to discuss how we can assist you.