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How to Send a Legally Compliant Service Charge Demand in the UK

The BlockKeeper Team

A complete guide to the legal requirements for service charge demands in England and Wales — including the Summary of Rights, Section 47 obligations, and the mistakes that make demands invalid.


If you're a director of a residents' management company (RMC) or RTM company, sending service charge demands is one of the most important things you'll do each year. Get it right and leaseholders pay up. Get it wrong — even accidentally — and leaseholders can legally withhold payment until you fix it.

That's not a metaphor. It's a specific legal provision under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985: if a service charge demand doesn't include the required statutory wording, leaseholders are entitled to withhold payment until a compliant demand is served. And if you then chase payment on a non-compliant demand, you're in a difficult position.

This guide explains exactly what a legally compliant service charge demand must include, the common mistakes that make demands invalid, and how to get this right every time.


What is a Service Charge Demand?

A service charge demand is the formal notice you send to leaseholders asking them to pay their share of the building's running costs. This might be:

All of these are service charge demands and all are subject to the same legal requirements.


What the Law Requires

The Section 47 and 48 requirements

Under Section 47 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987, every service charge demand must include:

  1. The name and address of the freeholder or management company (referred to in the statute as the "landlord") — specifically, an address in England and Wales where the leaseholder can serve notices. In leasehold blocks, this will typically be the freeholder, RMC, or RTM company, whichever is entitled to collect service charges. If your company doesn't have a physical address in England or Wales, you must provide one. A director's home address or your company's registered office usually works.
  2. The company's registered name (if different from what you normally use in correspondence)

Under Section 48, leaseholders don't have to pay anything — not just service charges but any rent or administration charges — until they've been given a valid address for service of notices. This requirement is easy to overlook but the consequences are significant.

The Summary of Rights and Obligations

This is the one that catches most self-managed directors out.

Section 21B of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 requires that every service charge demand must be accompanied by a prescribed Summary of Rights and Obligations. This is a specific document, the exact wording of which is set out in regulations — you can't paraphrase it, summarise it differently, or substitute your own version.

The summary must be printed or presented so it's clearly visible — typically included with the demand letter, either below it or as a second page. Simply referencing it isn't enough. It must accompany each individual demand.

What happens if you don't include it? The leaseholder can withhold payment of that demand until a compliant version is served. The clock on any debt enforcement doesn't start until then.

You can find the current prescribed wording in the Service Charges (Summary of Rights and Obligations, and Transitional Summary of Rights and Obligations) (England) Regulations 2007. It's also available from LEASE (the Leasehold Advisory Service) at lease-advice.org.


What Your Demand Letter Should Cover

Beyond the legal minimums, a well-structured service charge demand should include:

1. The service charge period Make clear which period the demand covers (e.g., "1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026").

2. The leaseholder's unit and apportionment State which flat the demand relates to and the percentage or fraction of the total service charge that unit is responsible for. This should match what's in the lease. If Flat 3 is responsible for 22.5% of the service charge, say so.

3. The total service charge budget and the leaseholder's share Show the full building budget and then the individual leaseholder's contribution. Some directors only show the individual amount — but showing the full budget builds transparency and reduces "why am I paying this?" queries.

4. A breakdown of budget headings Not legally required, but strongly recommended. "Service charge: £850.00" gives leaseholders nothing to assess reasonableness. "Buildings insurance: £320.00, Communal cleaning: £180.00, Gardening: £120.00, Reserve fund: £230.00" gives them a clear picture and dramatically reduces disputes.

5. Reserve fund contributions (if applicable) If you're collecting reserve fund contributions, these should ideally be shown separately — they're held on a different trust basis to the general service charge, and the accounting treatment is different.

6. Payment instructions and deadline Clear bank details (sort code and account number), the amount due, and the date by which payment is expected. Some leases specify payment terms — check yours.

7. Contact details Where should leaseholders direct questions? Make it easy to reach the right person.


The Service Charge Year and Timing

When should you send demands?

This depends on your lease. Many leases require demands to be served before or on a specific date — often at the start of the service charge year. Some require demands to be served a certain number of days before the payment due date.

Read your lease carefully. If you serve a demand late (after the date the lease requires), leaseholders may have grounds to dispute it, or the payment date effectively resets to 28 days after service.

Advance vs. arrears billing

Most service charge demands are issued in advance — you're asking leaseholders to pay their share of a budget for the year ahead. At year end, once actual costs are known, you reconcile:

Some leases work in arrears — you collect costs after they're incurred. This is less common and creates cash flow challenges.


The Section 20B Trap

Here's one that costs self-managed blocks significant money every year: the 18-month rule under Section 20B of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985.

If you incur a cost (say, an emergency roof repair) and don't issue a service charge demand — or a written notice of intention to demand — within 18 months of that cost being incurred, you lose the right to recover it from leaseholders. They can simply refuse to pay, and a tribunal will agree with them.

This is particularly dangerous for:

The fix is simple but requires discipline: issue demands (or at minimum, notices of intention to demand) promptly, and keep good records of when costs were incurred.


Common Mistakes That Make Demands Invalid

In roughly descending order of how often they occur:

1. Missing the Summary of Rights The most common. Every demand needs it, every time — even if you sent a compliant demand last year.

2. Wrong address for service The demand must include an England/Wales address where notices can be served. Using a non-England/Wales address (e.g., a Scottish or overseas address) doesn't satisfy the requirement.

3. Wrong apportionment If your lease says Flat 1 pays 30% and you demand 25% from them (perhaps because someone did the maths wrong), the demand isn't valid for the correct amount. Check the lease apportionments every year.

4. Demanding items not permitted by the lease You can only recover costs that the lease allows. Attempting to recover costs the lease doesn't cover — or costs that aren't "reasonable" under the LTA 1985 — gives leaseholders grounds to challenge the demand at the First-tier Tribunal.

5. No name/address of the freeholder or management company on the demand Simple to include, surprisingly often forgotten.

6. Sending demands to the wrong person Service charges are owed by the current leaseholder. If a flat has been sold and you haven't updated your records, you may be sending demands to someone who no longer owns the flat.


What's Changing Under LFRA 2024?

The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 introduced new transparency requirements for service charges that are being phased in through secondary legislation. Among the changes expected:

The exact implementation dates are still being confirmed, but the direction is clear: service charge demands and accounts are getting more regulated, not less. Software that stays on top of these changes — and generates demands in the correct format automatically — will become increasingly valuable.


Making This Manageable

Sending compliant demands manually — drafting letters, inserting the correct statutory text, checking apportionments against the lease, tracking who has paid — is time-consuming and error-prone. Most directors are doing this in their evenings after a full day at work.

The right tools make a significant difference. BlockKeeper generates service charge demands that include all required statutory wording automatically, calculates each leaseholder's share based on their lease apportionment, and tracks payments so you always know who's up to date and who isn't. It's built specifically for self-managed blocks — not professional agents — so it's designed to make sense to directors who aren't accountants or property lawyers. Find out more at blockkeeper.uk.


Quick Compliance Checklist

Before sending any service charge demand, check:

Keep a copy of every demand you send, with the date of sending. If a leaseholder later disputes payment or claims they never received it, you'll need that record.


Further reading:

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