Right to buy scheme for council tenants

The right to buy enables secure tenants who meet the qualifying requirements to buy the freehold or leasehold of the property at a discounted price.

The right to buy applies to tenants whose landlords are:

Landlord's duty to publish information about right to buy

All landlords offering secure tenancies must publish information about tenants' right to buy, such as details of the costs and responsibilities of home ownership and any restrictions on future disposals imposed, to enable tenants to decide whether to exercise the right.[ 1 ] The information must be available to tenants on request.[ 2 ]

The failure to provide full information about restrictions imposed on future disposals of properties originally bought under the right to buy procedure has been found to constitute maladministration causing injustice.[ 3 ]

Qualifying for the right to buy

In order to qualify for the right to buy and to be able to proceed with the purchase:

Flexible tenancies are a form of secure tenancies and also qualify.

Eligibility for the right to buy

Only secure tenants (this includes flexible tenants) have the right to buy. The only exception is for some previously secure council tenants whose tenancies have transferred to a private registered provider of social housing (PRPSH), formerly known as registered social landlord, for example under the Large Scale Voluntary Transfer (LSVT) provisions. These tenants (who will now be assured tenants) have a 'preserved right to buy'.[ 8 ] Other assured tenants of PRPSHs may be able to purchase under the right to acquire.

The right to buy is not available if the tenant does not occupy the property as their only or principal home, however a joint tenant or the tenant's spouse can occupy on their behalf.

Right to buy for introductory tenants

Introductory tenants do not have the right to buy. However, time spent as an introductory tenant counts towards the qualifying period for the right to buy and the amount of discount that can be claimed.[ 9 ]

Right to buy for demoted tenants

Tenants who have had their tenancy demoted due to antisocial behaviour do not have the right to buy while their tenancy is demoted.[ 10 ] A PRPSH tenant who has a secure tenancy or who has the preserved right to buy, and who has their tenancy demoted, loses the right to buy that property permanently. This is because, following the period of demotion, their tenancy becomes a standard assured tenancy. They may still have the right to acquire.

Periods spent as a demoted tenant do not count towards the qualifying period for the right to buy.[ 11 ]

Right to buy for joint tenants

Where there are joint tenants, any combination of them may exercise the right to buy as long as they all agree.[ 12 ] If not all the joint tenants are living in the property as their 'only or principal home', then at least one of the tenants who is occupying in this way must be included in the application.

Right to buy for members of the tenant's family

A tenant has the right to share the right to buy with up to three non-tenants who are members of their family,[ 13 ] as long as they all live in the property as their only or principal home and are either:

The landlord has discretion to allow other members of the family who do not meet the residence condition to be included.

Members of the family who are to be included in the right to buy must be included in the tenants' notice claiming the right. Once they have been included, they are treated as if they are joint tenants for the purposes of the right to buy.

Right to buy after a council tenant dies

Successors to secure tenancies can exercise the right to buy and count their own period of occupation before they succeeded to the tenancy for the purposes of calculating the minimum period for the exercise of the right, and the discount.[ 14 ]

Where a secure tenant dies during the right to buy procedure, a successor can require that the transaction is completed on the same terms (including the discount) as would have been available if the tenant had lived.[ 15 ] However, if no one qualifies to succeed, the right to buy usually ceases to exist as the tenancy is no longer secure, even where the council has been guilty of delaying the transaction.[ 16 ]

If a member of the tenant's family was joined to the right to buy under the co-purchaser procedure,[ 17 ] and the tenant dies leaving the other applicant in occupation, that other applicant is deemed to be a secure tenant for the purpose of completing the right to buy transaction, provided that they remain in occupation. They can therefore require that the sale be completed, even if there has been a previous succession.[ 18 ]

Exclusions from exercising the right to buy

There are a number of situations where the right to buy is not available or where the right can be lost during the period between the point in time when the tenant claims the right to buy and completes on the purchase. These situations may relate to the type of landlord, the type of letting, the landlord's ownership of the property, and factors concerning the tenant's conduct.

Situations where the right to buy is not available

There are some situations where the right to buy will not be available. These include the following situations:[ 19 ]

In one case where a secure tenant contended that demolition of his flat amounted to a violation of his rights under Article 1 of Protocol 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights as it interfered with his right to exercise the right to buy the flat, the High Court held that the statutory right to exercise the right to buy did not constitute ‘possession’ for the purposes of the Protocol, and that any such interference would anyway be proportionate and justified by the need to facilitate redevelopment.[ 21 ]

Situations where the right to buy can be lost or suspended

There are some circumstances where the right to buy might have initially been available, but is then lost or suspended owing to a change in circumstances.

A local authority can initially accept that the tenant has the right to buy, but can then refuse to complete the sale if any of the circumstances below apply: