Service charge & tribunal cases in BN1: Brighton
74 First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) decisions name an address in BN1 (Brighton). These are real, published leasehold disputes — most commonly other leasehold matter — a signal of how service charges and management are run in blocks across the area. Tribunal history is building-specific, so use it to check the exact block before you offer on a flat.
Matched by a full postcode in the decision title (address-in-title), not a map radius. England only.
What the BN1 cases are about
Every First-tier Tribunal decision carries an application-type code in its case reference. Across BN1:
Published decisions naming an address in BN1
The most recent decisions first. Each links to the full decision on GOV.UK. A decision names a specific building — use it to check the exact block, not the whole area.
- Section 20ZA dispensation
- Service charges
- Section 20ZA dispensation
- Service charges
- Service charges
- Section 20ZA dispensation
- Service charges
- Market rent
- Section 20ZA dispensation
- Flat 4, 3 Cavendish Place, Brighton, East Sussex. BN1 2HSSept 2025 (published)Service charges
- Section 20ZA dispensation
- Chartwell Court Russell Square Brighton BN1 2EWJul 2025 (published)Section 20ZA dispensation
- 49 & 49a Stanford Road, Brighton BN1 5DHMay 2025 (published)Section 20ZA dispensation
- Ground Floor Flat, 13 New England Road, Brighton, BN1 3TUMay 2025 (published)Market rent
- Flat 3, 42 Grantham Road, Brighton, BN1 6EEMay 2025 (published)Market rent
- Flat 3, 24 Albert Road, Brighton BN1 3RNMay 2025 (published)
- Wick Hall, Furze Hill, East Sussex BN1 1NHMay 2025 (published)
- Flat 2, 16 Victoria Road, Brighton, BN1 3FSMar 2025 (published)Market rent
Showing the 20 most recent of 74 decisions naming an address in BN1.
What this means before you offer on a flat
A tribunal record is building-specific. A block with a history of service-charge or Section 20 disputes can mean high or contested charges, major-works bills, or management you would inherit as the new leaseholder. A clean area record is reassuring but not proof — many disputes settle before a published decision.
Before you offer, ask the seller for the last three years of service-charge accounts and the major-works history, confirm the lease length and ground rent, and check whether the specific block you are buying in appears in the tribunal record above.
Check the exact building in BN1
This page is the area picture. The £24.99 Complete report runs the tribunal dispute check against one exact address, alongside the leasehold tenure and lease-years section — so you can see whether the specific block you are buying in has a record, before you offer.
Frequently asked questions
Have there been leasehold tribunal cases in BN1?
Yes. 74 First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) decisions name an address in BN1 (Brighton). They cover matters such as service-charge reasonableness, Section 20ZA dispensation, right to manage and manager appointments. Tribunal history attaches to a specific building, so check the exact block you are buying in.
What does a tribunal case tell a flat buyer?
A First-tier Tribunal decision is a public record that leaseholders and the freeholder/managing agent went to a tribunal — most often over service-charge reasonableness, major-works (Section 20) consultation, or the right to manage. A history of disputes in a block can flag high or contested charges, poor management, or major-works liabilities you would inherit. It is one of the strongest pre-offer signals a flat buyer can check.
How is a decision matched to this outcode?
The First-tier Tribunal dataset has no map coordinates. We match a decision to an outcode when its title contains a full postcode in that outcode — a precise, address-in-title match published by HM Courts & Tribunals Service on GOV.UK. It is text-based, so it finds decisions that name an address in the area, not a map radius.
How do I check the exact building in BN1?
Tribunal history is building-specific. The HouseCheckup Complete report runs the dispute check against one exact address (with the leasehold tenure and lease-years section), so you can see whether the specific block you are buying in has a tribunal record — before you offer.
Sources
- Residential property tribunal decisions — First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber), via GOV.UK
- Outcode geocoding — postcodes.io
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Tribunal decisions published by HM Courts & Tribunals Service via GOV.UK.