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Shared Ownership

Buy a 10–75% share of a home (5% on new AHP-funded homes) and pay rent on the rest.

Who it's for
Buyers who can't afford outright
Income cap
£80,000 household (£90,000 in London)
Status (April 2026)
Live, accepting new applicants.

How it works

Run by housing associations and landlords. You mortgage your share, pay rent on the unowned share (typically up to 2.75% p.a.), and can 'staircase' up over time. The 2021 model reduced minimum share to 10% (5% on Affordable Homes Programme homes), allowed 1% gradual staircasing with lower fees, and gives a 10-year repair warranty from the landlord on essential repairs.

The gotcha: Rent rises annually (often linked to RPI +0.5%). Service charges on flats can be steep and unpredictable. Staircasing requires a valuation each time (you pay). Watch lease length — many shared-ownership leases run out faster than freehold equivalents.

Official source: https://www.sharetobuy.com/shared-ownership/

Frequently asked

What happens when I want to sell?

Under the new 2021 model, the housing association has a 'nomination period' to find a buyer among qualifying households before you can list it on the open market. If they don't find someone within that window (typically 4-8 weeks), you can usually market it yourself — subject to the lease.

Are service charges really that bad?

On flats, often yes — the service charge is on the whole property value including the landlord's share, and you pay 100% of it. This is the single biggest complaint about Shared Ownership. Always review the last 3 years of service charges at conveyancing.

Where this sits in your planning

Schemes are one input to a buying decision, not the decision itself. Model the same purchase with and without the scheme on the affordability calculator — the total cash required and the monthly payment are usually the deciders, not the headline scheme benefit.

Last reviewed: 18 April 2026. Scheme details change — check the official page before acting on anything here.