⚠ Title Risk

Flying freehold: what buyers at auction need to know

A flying freehold is one of the most misunderstood title issues in UK property law — and one of the most common reasons a mortgage application is declined after auction. Here's what it means, where it hides in the legal pack, and how to assess the risk before you bid.

📅 Updated June 2026 ⏱ 6 min read 🇬🇧 England & Wales

What is a flying freehold?

A flying freehold arises when part of a freehold property physically extends over or under land that belongs to a different title. The "flying" element has no land beneath it registered to the same owner — it literally floats above someone else's ground.

Common examples include:

Flying freeholds are most common in Victorian and Edwardian terraces, converted buildings, and older town centre properties where boundaries were never precisely defined. They are a feature of English land law — they don't exist in the same way in Scotland, which uses a different property law framework.

The core problem is one of mutual support and maintenance. For a conventional freehold, you own the land and everything above it to the heavens. Where a flying freehold exists, the structural relationship between the two properties isn't automatically governed by law — there is no automatic right to support from the property below, and no automatic obligation on the neighbouring owner to maintain the structure that supports your flying portion.

⚠️ The legal gap

Unlike leasehold law, which imposes statutory obligations on both leaseholders and freeholders to maintain the structure, freehold law has no equivalent mechanism. A flying freehold relies on the original conveyance containing adequate mutual support and repair covenants — and many older conveyances either don't include them or include covenants that are unenforceable against successors in title.

Where a flying freehold appears in a legal pack

Flying freeholds are not always clearly labelled. You may need to piece together information from multiple documents:

Why lenders hate flying freeholds

Mainstream mortgage lenders have strict policies on flying freeholds, and most decline to lend on properties where a significant proportion of the building is "flying". The reasons are practical:

Individual lender policies vary. Halifax, Nationwide, and most high street lenders apply a blanket restriction. Some specialist lenders (including certain private banks and specialist residential lenders) will consider flying freeholds on a case-by-case basis, typically requiring indemnity insurance and limiting the flying portion to a small percentage of the total building area.

At auction, you are buying without the comfort of a conditional mortgage offer. If the property turns out to be unmortgageable after the hammer falls, you are still legally bound to complete — or forfeit your deposit and face a claim for damages.

Financial consequences for buyers

The financial impact of a flying freehold depends on the severity of the issue, but buyers should factor in:

A flying freehold also affects planning permission applications. Some local authorities will query structural responsibility and mutual support arrangements before approving extensions or structural alterations.

⚠ LegalPack AI — Sample Warning Flag
Flying freehold detected — 18% of this property overhangs the neighbouring title (Title Register, entry 3). Most high-street lenders will decline to mortgage this property. Indemnity insurance is available but does not resolve the underlying structural risk. Confirm your lender's policy before bidding. Estimate for indemnity insurance: £200–£400.

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Frequently asked questions

What is a flying freehold?

A flying freehold arises when part of a property physically extends over or under land owned by a different title — most commonly in terraced houses, Victorian conversions, and properties where an upper floor overhangs a neighbour's land or a shared passage. The "flying" portion has no land beneath it that belongs to the same owner.

Can I get a mortgage on a flying freehold?

Most high-street lenders decline to mortgage flying freehold properties. Some specialist lenders will consider them with indemnity insurance and where the flying portion is under 15–20% of the property. Always check your intended lender's policy before bidding at auction — you cannot withdraw after the hammer falls.

How do I know if a property has a flying freehold?

Check the title register, title plan, and special conditions of sale. The title plan will show the registered boundary — if the building clearly extends beyond it, this may indicate a flying freehold. The property information form (TA6) should also disclose it if the seller is aware. LegalPack AI flags this automatically across all documents in the pack.

Is a flying freehold a deal breaker?

Not automatically. A small flying portion (under 5%) with indemnity insurance and a specialist lender willing to lend may be perfectly manageable. A large flying freehold with no available insurance, no willing lender, and an uncooperative neighbour is a serious problem. The size of the affected area and your financing method are the key variables.

How much does flying freehold indemnity insurance cost?

Flying freehold indemnity insurance typically costs £150–£500 for a standard residential property, depending on the insurer, the property value, and the percentage of the property that is "flying". The policy protects against financial loss arising from enforcement of rights by the adjacent owner but does not change the underlying structural relationship between the properties.

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