Buying and Selling Property UK 2026 — The Complete Process Guide
Buying a Flat vs a House UK — Pros, Cons, and Costs Compared
Should you buy a flat or a house in the UK? A full comparison of costs, leasehold vs freehold, service charges, and what to watch out for.
For many UK buyers — especially first-timers — the choice between a flat and a house is one of the biggest financial decisions you’ll make. Each has pros, cons, and costs that aren’t always obvious.
For the wider cluster covering conveyancing, surveys, chains, selling routes and property-transaction decisions, use the main Buying and Selling Property UK hub.
Quick Comparison
| Feature |
Flat |
House |
| Average price |
Lower (typically 20–40% less) |
Higher |
| Ownership type |
Usually leasehold |
Usually freehold |
| Service charges |
Yes (£1,000–£5,000+/year) |
No |
| Ground rent |
Yes (being reformed) |
No (freehold) |
| Maintenance responsibility |
Shared (via service charge) |
Yours entirely |
| Outdoor space |
Limited (balcony or communal) |
Garden (usually) |
| Space |
Smaller |
Larger |
| Location |
Often better for central locations |
Often suburban or rural |
| Capital growth |
Generally slower |
Generally faster |
| Resale |
Can be harder (leasehold issues) |
Usually easier |
| First-time buyer suitability |
Good stepping stone |
Better long-term value |
Costs Compared
Purchase Price
| Property type |
UK average price (2024) |
| Flat |
~£220,000 |
| Terraced house |
~£260,000 |
| Semi-detached |
~£300,000 |
| Detached house |
~£440,000 |
Ongoing Annual Costs
| Cost |
Flat |
House |
| Mortgage (£200k, 25yr, 5%) |
£14,040 |
£14,040 (same amount borrowed) |
| Service charge |
£1,500 – £5,000 |
£0 |
| Ground rent |
£200 – £500 |
£0 |
| Council tax |
Often lower band |
Often higher band |
| Buildings insurance |
Included in service charge |
£200 – £500 (you arrange) |
| Contents insurance |
£100 – £250 |
£150 – £350 |
| Maintenance/repairs |
Covered by service charge (mostly) |
£1,000 – £3,000+ (your responsibility) |
| Total annual cost |
£16,000 – £20,000 |
£15,500 – £18,000 |
One-Off Costs (Buying)
| Cost |
Flat |
House |
Difference |
| Stamp duty (FTB, £250k) |
£0 (FTB relief) |
£0 (FTB relief) |
Same |
| Solicitor |
£1,000 – £2,000 |
£1,000 – £1,500 |
Flat often more (leasehold checks) |
| Survey |
£300 – £600 |
£400 – £700 |
Similar |
| Leasehold enquiries |
£200 – £500 |
£0 |
Extra cost for flats |
Leasehold — The Big Issue with Flats
How Leasehold Works
| Element |
Detail |
| You own |
The right to live there for the lease term |
| You don’t own |
The building or the land |
| Freeholder owns |
The building and land |
| Lease term |
Typically starts at 99 or 125 years |
| What you pay |
Ground rent + service charge to the freeholder |
| Major decisions |
Freeholder controls (or management company) |
Lease Length Matters
| Lease remaining |
Impact |
| 90+ years |
Fine — mortgage lenders happy |
| 80–90 years |
Getting short — harder to mortgage, more expensive to extend |
| Under 80 years |
Expensive to extend — “marriage value” kicks in (50% of value increase) |
| Under 70 years |
Very difficult to mortgage |
| Under 60 years |
Most lenders won’t touch it |
Lease Extension Costs
| Lease remaining |
Approximate extension cost (£250k flat) |
| 90 years |
£5,000 – £10,000 |
| 80 years |
£10,000 – £20,000 |
| 70 years |
£20,000 – £40,000 |
| 60 years |
£30,000 – £60,000+ |
Leasehold reform is ongoing — the government has committed to making lease extensions cheaper and potentially scrapping ground rent for existing leases. But legislation is slow.
Service Charges
| What’s typically included |
Cost contribution |
| Building maintenance |
Major portion |
| Communal cleaning |
Moderate |
| Lift maintenance |
Significant (high-rise) |
| Communal gardens |
Moderate |
| Buildings insurance |
Significant (you can’t choose provider) |
| Management company fees |
10%–15% of total service charge |
| Sinking fund / reserve fund |
For future major works |
Major Works — The Surprise Bill
| Work |
Typical cost per flat |
| Roof replacement |
£3,000 – £10,000 |
| External decorating |
£1,000 – £3,000 |
| Cladding remediation |
£10,000 – £100,000+ (post-Grenfell) |
| Lift replacement |
£2,000 – £5,000 |
| Window replacement |
£2,000 – £5,000 |
| Plumbing/heating overhaul |
£2,000 – £8,000 |
Houses — What to Know
Freehold Benefits
| Benefit |
Detail |
| You own everything |
The building AND the land |
| No service charges |
But all maintenance is your cost |
| No ground rent |
Nothing to pay |
| Full control |
Extend, modify, decorate — your choice (with planning permission) |
| Better capital growth |
Houses typically appreciate faster |
| Easier to sell |
No leasehold complications |
House Maintenance Costs
| Maintenance |
Typical cost |
| Boiler service |
£80 – £150/year |
| Boiler replacement |
£2,500 – £4,000 (every 10–15 years) |
| Roof repairs |
£500 – £5,000+ |
| Damp treatment |
£500 – £3,000 |
| Repointing |
£1,000 – £5,000 |
| Window replacement |
£3,000 – £10,000 |
| Kitchen/bathroom renovation |
£5,000 – £20,000 |
| Garden maintenance |
£500 – £2,000/year (or DIY) |
Budget £1,000–£3,000 per year for ongoing maintenance but build a reserve for bigger works.
Investment Comparison
Capital Growth
| Property type |
Average annual growth (long-term) |
| Houses |
4% – 6% |
| Flats |
2% – 4% |
Flats typically grow in value more slowly, partly because:
- Lease depreciation (lease gets shorter each year)
- Service charge concerns put off buyers
- Oversupply of new-build flats in some areas
- Cladding and building safety issues (post-Grenfell)
Mortgage Considerations
| Factor |
Flat |
House |
| Deposit |
Same percentage |
Same percentage |
| Interest rate |
Sometimes slightly higher |
Standard |
| Lease length requirement |
Must have 70+ years remaining (ideally 80+) |
N/A |
| Non-standard construction |
Check if insurable |
Less common issue |
| Cladding issues |
Can prevent mortgage |
N/A |
Decision Framework
Buy a Flat If
| Factor |
Why |
| You’re a first-time buyer on a budget |
More affordable entry point |
| You want a central location |
Flats dominate city centres |
| You don’t want garden maintenance |
Communal spaces maintained for you |
| You’re buying as a stepping stone |
Build equity, then upgrade later |
| Security is important |
Often better security (communal entrance, CCTV) |
Buy a House If
| Factor |
Why |
| You want full ownership and control |
Freehold = you own everything |
| You have a growing family |
More space, garden, storage |
| You’re buying long-term |
Better value and capital growth |
| You want to avoid service charges |
No ongoing charges to a freeholder |
| You want to extend or modify |
Full flexibility (with planning permission) |
Summary
| Factor |
Flat |
House |
| Cheaper to buy |
Yes |
No |
| Cheaper to run |
No (service charges add up) |
Often similar or cheaper overall |
| Better location |
Often |
Sometimes |
| Better investment |
Usually no |
Usually yes |
| More control |
No |
Yes |
| Leasehold risk |
Yes |
No (usually freehold) |
| Best for first-timers |
Good stepping stone |
Better if affordable |
| Key advice |
Check lease length, service charges, sinking fund, and cladding |
Budget for maintenance |
aliases:
- /mortgages/buying-selling/buying-flat-vs-house-guide/
Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.
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