Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • The English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill includes provisions banning upwards only rent reviews based on market rent, or other notional rent, inflation or other index or multiplier, turnover or side by side, in new leases of commercial premises in England and Wales.
  • Fixed increases included in the lease will be permitted – the amounts of the increases being known at the time the lease is granted.
  • CPI/RPI-linked rent reviews will be permissible but on the basis that they are not upwards only. Whilst a cap should not fall foul of the prohibition, a collar setting the rent at the same level or higher than the passing rent is likely to do so.
  • The Bill includes a power for regulations to be passed to create exceptions to the ban. The guidance notes accompanying the Bill suggest as an example, an exception for caps and collars where a lease is contingent on development to give greater certainty to rent increases or decreases.
  • The provisions are a short part of a lengthy Bill, which mostly relates to local authorities, police and crime commissioners and fire and rescue authorities. The proposed provisions may not get through what is likely to be a lengthy process unamended or may not become law.

Proposed Provisions

The Bill had its first reading in the House of Commons on 10 July. The Bill includes provisions which if enacted as drafted will prohibit upward only rent reviews in new leases.

It is proposed that the new provisions will be incorporated as new Schedules to the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 (1954 Act).