Factsheet - Selling or gifting a park home
June 2013
This fact sheet gives some basic guidance to owners of park homes on protected
sites in England about selling or gifting a home.
A separate fact sheet has been prepared for someone intending to buy a park home.
This can be downloaded from www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance . We strongly
recommend that you give a copy of that fact sheet to your proposed buyer so the
transaction runs smoothly and mistakes are avoided.
This fact sheet does not apply to homes on local-authority traveller sites because the
provisions in the Mobile Homes Act 1983 relating to selling a home do not apply to
these sites.
This fact sheet is not a full or definitive statement of the law and does not cover all
cases. Ultimately, interpretation of the law is a matter for the courts and tribunals
based on the individual facts of any particular case. The key legislation governing the
selling and gifting of park homes is contained in Chapter 2 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to
the Mobile Homes Act (as amended) and in the Mobile Homes (Selling and Gifting)
(England) Regulations 2013. If you need more advice or information about your legal
rights or responsibilities, you should contact a citizens’ advice bureau, a solicitor or
the Leasehold Advisory Service.
Summary
On 26 May 2013 important changes in the law affecting how you sell or gift a park
home on private sites came into force. From that date:
• The site owner’s approval of the buyer is no longer required, even if your pitch
agreement or site rules say it is. However, if you acquired your home before 26
May 2013 you will need to notify the site owner of the proposed sale.
• Your buyer will need to meet relevant site rules. However, any site rules which
could be used by a site owner to block sales or interfere in the sale process
are banned. It is also a criminal offence to put people off buying a home by
telling lies.
• You and the buyer need to follow a set procedure and use certain forms when
completing the process. Details about the procedure are set out in this fact
sheet and the forms can be downloaded from www.gov.uk/park-homes-
guidance.
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Getting further advice and help in selling your home
The Mobile Homes Act 2013 places a number of obligations on both the seller and
the buyer. A failure to meet these obligations could result in the purchaser or a site
owner taking legal action against you.
You are, therefore, strongly advised to use a solicitor or someone
with expertise in selling homes independent from the site owner
when selling your home. Few people would sell or buy a conventional home
without professional help and many of the same considerations and issues apply
when selling a park home.
If you need advice about your rights and obligations you can contact the Leasehold
Advisory Service (LEASE) on 020 7383 9800 or at www.lease-advice.org.
LEASE can provide free initial advice on the requirements, but it cannot help you fill
in the forms or act on your behalf.
You should read the relevant sections in this factsheet as these contain important
information about your obligations and rights.
• If you are selling a home you bought before 26 May 2013 you should read
• If you are selling a home you bought on or after 26 May 2013 you should read
• If you bought your home before 26 May 2013, and are planning to give it away
• If you bought your home on or after 26 May 2013, and are planning to give it
• If you are selling a home you have inherited you should read sections 1, 7, 8
1. Preparing to sell your home
1.1 You can sell your home on the site and transfer the agreement to anyone you choose.
But if the site has rules your buyer will need to confirm that they are able to comply with
them.
1.2 You do not need the site owner’s permission to sell the home or tell the site owner you
are planning to sell.
1.3 You may use an estate agent and can choose which estate agent to use. Some site
owners may offer a sales service. You should think very carefully before deciding to use
such a service because you will be charged for it and your buyer’s details will be available
to the site owner.
1.4 You do not need an energy performance certificate to sell a home. There is also no
legal requirement to have your home surveyed and the site owner cannot insist on it.
When you send details of the sale to the buyer you will need to let them know whether a
survey has been carried out. The buyer can ask that this is done. If a survey is required
how this is arranged and paid for is a decision for you and the buyer. You do not need to
sections 1, 2, 8 and 9.
sections 1, 3, 8 and 9.
to a relative, you should read sections 4, 5, 8 and 9.
away to a relative, you should read sections 4, 6, 8 and 9.
and 9.
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involve the site owner.
1.5 You are responsible for making sure that you give the buyer full and accurate
information so that they can make an informed decision about whether to go ahead. If you
do not do this, the sale may fall through at a later stage. If the sale goes ahead, and during
the process you failed to reveal relevant information that was available to you or you gave
information that you knew was false or misleading, you may be legally responsible if the
buyer has any problems in the future.
2. Selling procedure if you became an occupier of the
home before 26 May 2013
2.1 This section applies to you if you bought or otherwise obtained ownership of your park
home before 26 May 2013.
2.2 From 26 May 2013, you no longer need to seek the site owner’s approval of the buyer.
You will, however, be required to complete a number of forms during the sales process
and notify the site owner of the proposed sale.
When you have found a buyer
2.3 When you have found an interested buyer, you must supply them with certain
prescribed information and documents using a ‘Buyer’s information form’. The purpose
of this form and the documents accompanying it is to give the proposed purchaser the
necessary information to enable them to decide whether they want to purchase your
home. A copy of the ‘Buyer’s information form’ is available at www.gov.uk/park-
homes-guidance
2.4 The information and documents that you are required to provide the buyer are listed in
the Buyer’s information form.
2.5 You might want to send only photocopies of the documents at this stage, but you must
ensure they are legible. You will need to sign the form confirming the information is up to
date and accurate. If you are not able to provide a document or give certain information
you need to let the buyer know why.
2.6 You can give the form and documents to the proposed buyer personally or send it to
them by post. You must provide the information and documents at least 28 days before the
completion date. You don’t need to decide a completion date at this stage. However, if the
buyer agrees to an earlier completion date, but if the completion date you agree with the
buyer is less than 28 days from the date you provided the information and documents to
the proposed buyer, you must get confirmation from the buyer in writing that they have
agreed to a period which is shorter than 28 days.
What if I haven’t got all the paper work or information?
2.7 If you are not able to provide some of the information or documents that are required to
be given with the Buyer’s information form you must let the proposed buyer know what this
is and explain why you are unable to provide it.
2.8 It is your responsibility to make all diligent enquiries to obtain the necessary
information and documents. Failure to disclose may result in the proposed buyer
withdrawing from the transaction and if you give incomplete or misleading information this
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could result in action being taken against you by the proposed buyer should the sale go
ahead.
2.9 It is therefore, in your interest to ensure all your paper work is up to date before you
embark on finding a buyer. If you are unsure you have all the correct documents you are
strongly advised to seek advice from a solicitor before marketing your home.
Agreeing a sale with the buyer and telling the site owner
2.10 The buyer will consider the information you provided them and might seek further
details or clarification. The site owner has no legal right to have or make contact with
a proposed buyer, even if the owner tells you they do.
2.11 If the proposed buyer confirms that they wish to proceed with the sale, you will need
to notify the site owner of the purchase by completing a ‘Notice of proposed sale’ form.
The form provides the site owner with confirmation of the sale price and commission
payable and where the park has site rules, confirmation that the buyer meets the rules.
The form can be downloaded from www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
2.12 Where the rules relate to the permitted age of residents, the keeping of pets and the
parking of vehicles the proposed buyer will need to provide relevant details. You and the
proposed buyer will need to complete and sign the form, to confirm the information in it is
accurate and up to date.
2.13 You can give the form to the site owner personally or send it by post to the site
owner’s address where notices can be served. Where this address has not been supplied
to you in accordance with the law, you can serve the notice to any other known address of
the owner.
What happens when I send the form to the site owner?
2.14 The site owner may contact you to seek the contact or personal details of the
proposed buyer. Although they may tell you they are entitled to this information,
they are not.
2.15 When the site owner receives the form, they will have 21 days to decide whether or
not to object to the sale. If the site owner has no objection to the sale going ahead, they
may let you know. If they don’t, you will still need to wait 21 days before proceeding with
the sale.
2.16 If the site owner objects to the sale going ahead, they must make an application to
the tribunal for a refusal order and must also notify you in writing of their application. They
must do these two things within 21 days of you giving the notice of proposed sale. If you
are not given the notice within the 21 day period their application will not be valid.
2.17 If you are notified that the site owner has applied for a Refusal Order you will need to
put your sale on hold until the tribunal makes a decision on the application.
2.18 A site owner can only apply to a tribunal for a Refusal Order on three grounds. These
are that if the sale were to go ahead the buyer (or someone intending to reside in the park
home with the buyer) would not meet an existing site rule
• by reason of age
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• by keeping any prohibited animals or
• by parking prohibited vehicles or more than the number of vehicles permitted than
they should
2.19 The tribunal will only ask you and the proposed buyer to participate in the
proceedings if it thinks the site owner has a reasonable prospect of getting the order they
want. They will want to hear your side of the case.
2.20 If the tribunal dismisses the application as lacking in merit or because the case is not
made out sufficiently, you will be able to go ahead with the sale without any further
involvement of the site owner.
2.21 However, if the tribunal accepts the application and makes a Refusal Order you will
not be able to sell your home to the proposed buyer. You can however start the procedure
afresh and sell your home to a new buyer who meets the relevant site rules.
Assignment of the agreement
2.22 If the site owner doesn’t object to the sale or fails to apply to the tribunal and notify
you of the application in 21 days or the tribunal has decided in your favour, the sale can
proceed.
2.23 If at this stage, your proposed buyer still wants to proceed with the purchase and is
satisfied that they meet the rules and are able to comply with the obligations under the
pitch agreement, you will have to transfer the pitch agreement to them. This is called the
Assignment. You and the proposed buyer will need to complete an ‘Assignment form’
which gives effect to the assignment. The form provides confirmation of the agreed
purchase price, the commission payable to the site owner and the pitch fee payable by the
new occupier. A copy of the form can be downloaded from www.gov.uk/park-homes-
guidance.
2.24 You must give the proposed buyer your forwarding address at this stage and also
ensure that they have all the correct paper work, including the agreement, written
statement and site rules.
2.25 You must also tell the buyer what they must do after the assignment of the agreement
to ensure the transaction completes legally.
2.26 Remember the site owner is no longer involved in the sale. Their consent is not
needed to assign the agreement and you do not have to go to their office to do so.
Payment for the park home
2.27 Before you exchange money you might need to agree with the buyer final meter
readings and apportionment of any outstanding bills. Remember to give the buyer your
new address for any future correspondence.
2.28 You are entitled to 90 % of the sale price when the sale is completed. The buyer must
hold the remaining 10% as commission which has to be paid to the site owner later.
2.29 Once you have completed the assignment, handed over the relevant paper work and
received payment, you have sold the home and should, of course, hand over the keys to
the buyer.
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The new occupier’s responsibilities after the assignment
2.30 Within 7 days of the assignment, your buyer, the new occupier, must send the site
owner a Notice of assignment form together with a number of documents. The new
occupier will need to sign the form and confirm the information and documents supplied
are true and up to date. A copy of the form can be downloaded from www.gov.uk/park-
homes-guidance.
2.31 The new occupier can give the form to the site owner personally or send it by post to
the site owner’s address where notices can be served. Where this address is not available,
they can serve the notice to any other known address of the owner.
2.32 The information and documents that the new occupier is required to give the site
owner are listed in the Notice of assignment form.
Payment of commission
2.33 As soon as is practicable after receipt of the Notice of assignment form, the site
owner must provide the new occupier with details of their bank account into which the
commission should be paid. The payment of the commission does not become due
until the site owner has provided the new occupier with his bank details. On receipt
of the details, the new occupier will have 7 days to pay the commission into the site
owner’s bank account.
2.34 There is no VAT due on the commission payment. The site owner is also not entitled
to any other payments in relation to the sale of a home.
What are the rules if I found a buyer before 26 May 2013, but have not
yet completed the sale?
2.35 If you found a buyer before 26 May 2013 but the sale has not yet gone through, the
procedure set out in paragraphs 2.3 to 2.34 will apply unless, before 26 May, you wrote
to the site owner seeking approval of the buyer under the old rules.
2.36 In that case, you can proceed with the sale under the old rules, whether or not the
site owner has given approval of the buyer. If they have not given approval within 28 days
of you asking for it and you think this is unreasonable you can apply to a tribunal for an
order approving the buyer.
2.37 However, if you think the site owner’s approval has been unreasonably withheld and
you don’t want to go to the tribunal you can write to the site owner to tell him that you no
longer seek his approval of the purchaser. If you do this you can continue with the sale,
but you will need to comply with the procedure set out in paragraphs 2.3 to 2.34.
2.38 If you already have a case at the tribunal (as of 26 May) under the old rules the
changes do not affect you.
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3. Selling procedure if you became an occupier of the
home on or after 26 May 2013
3.1 This section applies if you bought or otherwise obtained ownership of your park home
on or after 26 May 2013.
When you have found a buyer
3.2 When you have found an interested buyer, you must supply them with certain
prescribed information and documents using a ‘Buyer’s information form’. The purpose
of this form and the documents accompanying it is to give the proposed purchaser the
necessary information to enable them to decide whether they want to purchase your
home. A copy of the ‘Buyer’s information form’ is available at www.gov.uk/park-
homes-guidance.
3.3 The information and documents that you are required to provide the buyer are listed in
the Buyer’s information form.
3.4 You might want to send only photocopies of the documents at this stage, but you must
ensure they are legible. You will need to sign the form confirming the information is up to
date and accurate. If you are not able to provide a document or give certain information
you need to let the buyer know why.
3.5 You can give the form and documents to the proposed buyer personally or send it to
them by post. You must provide the information and documents at least 28 days before the
proposed completion date. You don’t need to decide a completion date at this stage.
However, if the buyer agrees to an earlier completion date, they must confirm the date in
writing to you.
What if I haven’t got all the paper work or information?
3.6 If you are not able to provide some of the information or documents that are required
to be given with the Buyer’s information form you must let the proposed buyer know what
this is and explain why you are unable to provide it.
3.7 It is your responsibility to make all diligent enquiries to obtain the necessary
information and documents. Failure to disclose may result in the proposed buyer
withdrawing from the transaction and if you give incomplete or misleading information this
could result in action being taken against you by the proposed buyer should the sale go
ahead.
3.8 It is, therefore, in your interest to ensure all your paper work is up to date before you
embark on finding a buyer. If you are unsure you have all the correct documents you are
strongly advised to seek advice from a solicitor before marketing your home.
Agreeing a sale with the buyer and assignment of the agreement
3.9 The proposed buyer will consider the information you provided them and might seek
further details or clarification. In particular the proposed buyer will need to satisfy
themselves that they meet the relevant rules for living on the site, otherwise they could end
up losing their home. Also, if you didn’t give them the correct information about the rules
they may have grounds for taking legal action against you.
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3.10 The site owner has no legal right to have or make contact with your buyer, even
if the owner tells you they do. The site owner is not entitled to demand a meeting
with or require an interview with them.
3.11 If at this stage your proposed buyer wants to proceed with the purchase and is
satisfied that they meet the rules and can comply with the obligations under the pitch
agreement, you will have to transfer the pitch agreement to them. This is called the
Assignment.
3.12 You and the proposed buyer will need to complete an ‘Assignment form’ which
gives effect to the assignment. The form provides confirmation of the agreed purchase
price, the commission payable to the site owner and the pitch fee payable by the new
occupier. A copy of the form is available at www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
3.13 You must give the proposed buyer your forwarding address at this stage and also
ensure that they have all the correct paper work, including the agreement, written
statement and site rules.
3.14 You must also tell the buyer what they must do after the assignment of the agreement
to ensure the transaction completes legally.
3.15 The site owner is not involved in the sale. You do not need to send them a
Notice of proposed sale form. That form is only relevant if you became an occupier
of your home prior to 26 May 2013 (see section 2 of this fact sheet). Nor do you
require the site owner’s consent to assign the agreement. You do not have to go to
the site owner’s office to assign the agreement.
Payment for the park home
3.16 Before you exchange money you might need to agree with the buyer final meter
readings and apportionment of any outstanding bills. Remember to give the buyer your
new address for any future correspondence.
3.17 You are entitled to 90 % of the sale price when the sale is completed. The buyer must
hold the remaining 10% as commission which has to be paid to the site owner later.
3.18 Once you have completed the assignment, handed over the relevant paper work and
received payment, you have sold the home and should, of course, hand over the keys to
the buyer.
The new occupier’s responsibilities after the assignment
3.19 Within 7 days of the assignment, your buyer, the new occupier, must send the site
owner a Notice of assignment form together with a number of documents. The new
occupier will need to sign the form and confirm the information and documents supplied
are true and up to date. In particular the new occupier is confirming that they will comply
with any relevant rules that apply to the site. A copy of the form can be downloaded from
www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
3.20 The new occupier can give the form to the site owner personally or send it by post to
the site owner’s address where notices can be served. Where this address is not available,
they can serve the notice to any other known address of the owner.
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3.21 The information and documents that the new occupier is required to give the site
owner are listed in the Notice of assignment form.
Payment of commission
3.22 As soon as is practicable after receipt of the Notice of assignment form, the site
owner must provide the new occupier with details of their bank account into which the
commission should be paid. The payment of the commission does not become due
until the site owner has provided the home owner with his bank details. On receipt of
the details, the new occupier will have 7 days to pay the commission into the site owner’s
bank account.
3.23 There is no VAT due on the commission payment. The site owner is not entitled to
any other payments in relation to the sale of a home.
4. Gifting a Home
4.1 By law if you own and live in your home, you can give it away and assign the
agreement (known as “gifting”) to a member of your family. You cannot gift the home other
than to a person who is a ‘member of your family’ within the legal definition set out in
section 5(3) of the Mobile Homes Act 1983 (as amended by the Civil Partnership Act
2004). Your family member will need to prove they are related to you within that definition.
You cannot gift a home if you inherited it, but are not entitled to live in it.
4.2 You are not allowed to receive any payment in connection with the gift. Neither
is the site owner entitled to receive commission or any other payment.
4.3 Different rules apply on the procedure that you need to go through to gift your home
depending on when you acquired ownership of the home.
5. Gifting a home you acquired before 26 May 2013
5.1 Before you and your relative agree to the gift of the home and assignment of the
agreement you must make sure your relative is aware of their responsibilities and liabilities
should they agree to accept the gift. In particular they will need to know the terms of the
pitch agreement, the current pitch fee and when it is next to be renewed and any other
charges that apply, such as for gas, electricity, water or council tax. You will need to let
them have a copy of the site rules so they can satisfy themselves they meet those rules.
5.2 If you and your relative are happy to go ahead with the gift you will both need to
complete a Notice of proposed gift form and sign it to confirm the information in it is
accurate and up to date. The form can be downloaded from www.gov.uk/park-homes-
guidance.
5.3 The notice of proposed gift form provides the site owner with confirmation that the
person to whom the home is being gifted is a member of your family and where the park
has site rules, confirmation that that person meets the rules.
5.4 You will also need to provide proof to the site owner that the person to whom you are
gifting the home is a member of your family. (Note (ii) in the notice of proposed gift form
sets out the relevant definition). The evidence which is acceptable is listed in section 1 of
the form and is further explained in note (iii) in that form. Such evidence includes;
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• a written declaration under oath explaining your relationship;
• a birth or adoption certificate or
• a marriage or civil partnership certificate.
5.5 If the site has rules that relate to the permitted age of residents, the keeping of pets
and the parking of vehicles your relative will need to provide relevant information to enable
the site owner to see that they will be able to comply with the rules (see section 2 of the
notice of proposed gift form).
5.6. You can give the form to the site owner personally or send it by post to the site
owner’s address where notices can be served. Where this address has not been supplied
to you in accordance with the law, you can serve the notice to any other known address of
the owner.
What happens when I send the form to the site owner?
5.7 The site owner may contact you to seek the contact or personal details of your
relative. Although they may tell you they are entitled to this information, they are
not.
5.8 When the site owner receives the form, they will have 21 days to decide whether or not
to object to the gift. If the site owner has no objection to the gift going ahead, they may let
you know. If they don’t, you will still need to wait 21 days before proceeding with the gift.
5.9 If the site owner objects to the gift going ahead, they must make an application to the
tribunal for a refusal order and must also notify you in writing of their application. They
must do these two things within 21 days of you giving them the notice of proposed gift
form. If you are not given the notice within the 21 day period the application will not be
valid.
5.10 If you are notified that the site owner has applied for a Refusal Order you will need to
put your gift on hold until the tribunal makes a decision on the application.
5.11 A site owner can only apply to a tribunal for a Refusal Order on four specific grounds.
The first three are that if the transaction were to go ahead, the person to whom you
propose to gift the park home (or someone intending to reside in the park home with that
person) would not meet an existing site rule:
• by reason of age
• by keeping any prohibited animals or
• by parking prohibited vehicles or more than the number of vehicles permitted than
they should
5.12 The fourth ground is that you have not provided the site owner with evidence that the
person to whom you proposed to gift your park home is a member of your family. This
would include cases where the site owner has reason to believe the evidence provided is
not correct.
5.13 The tribunal will only ask you and the person to whom the home is to be gifted to
participate in the proceedings if it thinks the site owner has a reasonable prospect of
getting the order they want. They will want to hear your side of the case.
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5.14 If the tribunal dismisses the application as lacking in merit or because the case is not
made out sufficiently, you will be able to go ahead with the gift without any further
involvement of the site owner.
5.15 However, if the tribunal accepts the application and makes a Refusal Order you will
not be able to gift your home to this particular person on the basis of the evidence the
tribunal has considered.
Assignment of the agreement
5.16 If the site owner doesn’t object to the gift, or fails to apply to the tribunal and notify
you of the application within the 21 day period, or else the tribunal has decided in your
favour, the gift can proceed.
5.17 If your relative is satisfied that they meet the rules and are able to pay the pitch fee
and comply with the obligations under the pitch agreement, you will have to transfer the
pitch agreement to your relative (this is called the Assignment). Both of you will need to
complete an ‘Assignment form’ which gives effect to the assignment. A copy of the form
is available at www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
5.18 Your relative will need your forwarding address so you must ensure that they have it
by this stage. You will also need to ensure they have all the correct paper work, including
the agreement, written statement and any site rules.
5.19 You must also tell your relative what they must do after the assignment of the
agreement to ensure the transaction completes legally
5.20 The site owner is not involved in the gifting process. You do not need to send
them a Notice of proposed gift form and do not require their consent to assign the
agreement. You do not have to go to the site owner’s office to assign the
agreement.
The new occupier’s responsibilities after the assignment
5.21 When you complete the assignment, ownership of the home passes to your relative
and they become responsible for the pitch agreement and other liabilities. Within 7 days of
the assignment, your relative, the new occupier, must send the site owner a Notice of
assignment form together with a number of documents. The form can be downloaded
from www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance .
5.22 The new occupier can deliver the form and documents to the site owner either
personally or by post. They will need to sign the form and confirm the information and
documents supplied are true and up to date. In particular the new occupier will be
confirming that they will comply with any relevant rules that apply to the site.
5.23 The information and documents the new occupier is required to give the site owner
are listed in the Notice of assignment form.
6. Gifting a home you acquired on or after 26 May 2013
6.1 Before you and your relative agree to the assignment of the agreement you must make
sure your relative is aware of their responsibilities and liabilities should they agree to
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accept the gift. In particular they will need to know the terms of the pitch agreement, the
current pitch fee and when it is next to be renewed and any other charges that apply, such
as for gas, electricity, water or council tax. You will need to let them have a copy of the site
rules so they can satisfy themselves they meet those rules.
6.2 You need to go through some formalities before the home can be gifted to ensure that
the gifting is a bona fide transaction and is completely legal so as to protect the interests of
the parties and the site owner.
Notifying the site owner of the family relationship
6.3 Before you can gift the home you must provide the site owner with evidence that the
person to whom you intend to gift the park home is a member of your family as defined in
section 5(3) of the Mobile Homes Act 1983. Such evidence includes any one or more of
the following which explains the relationship:
• a written declaration under oath explaining your relationship;
• a birth or adoption certificate
• a marriage or civil partnership certificate
• any other evidence which provides proof of the relationship.
6.4 You do not need the site owner’s permission to gift the home and they have no
right to interview your relative. You do not need to send them a Notice of proposed
gift form. That form is only relevant if you became an occupier of your home prior to
26 May 2013 (see section 5 of this fact sheet).
Assignment of the agreement
6.5 Next you and the relative will need to assign the agreement. Before doing so your
relative will need to satisfy themselves that they meet the relevant rules for living on the
site, otherwise they could end up losing the home.
6.6 If your relative is satisfied that they meet the rules and are able to pay the pitch fee and
comply with the obligations under the pitch agreement, you will have to transfer the pitch
agreement (this is called the Assignment) to the relative. Both of you will need to complete
an ‘Assignment form’ which gives effect to the assignment. The form provides
confirmation of the agreed purchase price, the commission payable to the site owner and
the pitch fee payable by the new occupier. A copy of the form is available at
www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
6.7 Your relative will need your forwarding address so you must ensure that they have it by
this stage. You will also need to ensure they have all the correct paper work, including the
agreement, written statement and site rules.
6.8 You must also tell your relative what they must do after the assignment of the
agreement to ensure the transaction completes legally.
6.9 You do not require the site owner’s consent to assign the agreement. You do not
have to go to the site owner’s office to assign the agreement. The site owner is also
not entitled to receive your relative’s contact details until after the gift has gone
through.
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The new occupier’s responsibilities after the assignment
6.10 When you complete the assignment, ownership of the home passes to your relative
and they become responsible for the pitch agreement and other liabilities. Within 7 days of
the assignment, your relative, the new occupier, must send the site owner a Notice of
assignment form together with a number of documents. The form can be downloaded
from www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
6.11 The new occupier can deliver the form and documents to the site owner either
personally or by post. They will need to sign the form and confirm the information and
documents supplied are true and up to date. In particular the new occupier will be
confirming that they will comply with any relevant rules that apply to the site.
6.12 The information and documents that the new occupier is required to give the site
owner are listed in the Notice of assignment form.
7. Selling a home after a home owner has died
7.1 This section applies if you inherit a home following the death of the owner and do not
live in the home.
7.2 Until you sell the home you are liable for pitch fees and other outgoings and are
responsible for ensuring the terms of the pitch agreement are complied with. You cannot,
however, move into it (without the site owner’s permission) or rent it out.
7.3 You are entitled to sell the home in the open market. (You cannot, however, gift (give it
away) it to a relative as explained in section 4 of this fact sheet). You do not need the site
owner’s permission to sell the home or seek their approval of the purchaser.
7.4 You may, however, need to notify the site owner of the proposed buyer. This will
depend on when the person you inherited it from acquired it themselves. If this was before
26 May 2013 the rules in section 2 of this fact sheet apply. If it was on or after that date
the rules in section 3 of this fact sheet apply.
7.5 You should read the relevant section carefully before attempting to sell the home, as it
sets out the lawful procedures that must be followed.
7.6 You should also be aware that the site owner cannot require you to remove the home
from the site or remove it from the site himself. A court order is required to obtain
possession of the pitch. This can only be granted in certain circumstances and you must
be told about the proceedings. It is illegal to evict you from the site without an order from
the court and it is also illegal to harass you into giving up the home. More about this is
explained in section 9 of this fact sheet.
7.7 The site owner cannot require you to sell the home to them and nor are they entitled to
first refusal on the sale. The ban on certain site rules (see section 8 of this fact sheet)
apply to your sale as much as they apply to sales by owner occupiers.
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8. Site Rules
Pre-commencement Banned rules
8.1 From 26 May 2013 any site rules which were made by the site owner prior to that date
(referred to in the legislation as ‘pre commencement rules’) which could lead to a site
owner interfering with or blocking a sale or gift of a home have been banned.
8.2 The banned rules are those that say:
• You, or the proposed occupier, must give the site owner all, or any of the following
details about the proposed occupier or anyone intending to reside in the home with
the proposed occupier – their address or contact details (including e-mail address
or telephone number); their financial details (including bank account details, card
numbers), their age, sex, ethnic origin or sexual orientation.
• The proposed occupier must attend a meeting with the site owner (or their
representatives);
• The home must be sold to the site owner or they must be given first right of refusal;
• You must let the site owner know you are planning to sell or gift your home;
• You must sell or gift your home through the site owner or someone else they
nominate;
• The home may not be sold through an estate agent or with the services of a
solicitor;
• That you cannot use any other type of service (whether specified or not) to sell your
home;
• That no sale board or other means of advertising the home for sale is permitted on
the pitch or on the home ;
• That a survey is required before the home can be sold or gifted (whether or not
such a survey is to be the site owner or anyone else);
8.3 If any of the matters listed above are included in rules that apply to your site, they will
no longer be enforceable and can be ignored. You will not be in breach of your agreement
by not complying with them and nor can a sale be held up or threatened with invalidity
because a banned rule has not been complied with.
Making Site rules
8.4 A new statutory procedure for the making of site rules is due to be implemented later
this year. Under the new procedure site owners will be required to consult with residents
about making new site rules (if they want to apply site rules to the park home site) and will
be required to deposit the rules with the local authority. The new site rules cannot include
rules that have been “banned” (as explained above). Until such time as the new statutory
procedure is in place, any site rules made before the 26 May 2013 (known as ‘pre-
commencement rules’), other than any which have been banned (see above), will continue
to apply to the site.
8.5 A fact sheet on site rules giving further information on the new system will be published
shortly at www.gov.uk/park-homes-guidance.
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9. Interfering with or stopping a sale: Criminal offences
9.1 It is illegal for the site owner, or anyone acting on his behalf, like a manager or warden
to do or say things that are designed to try to prevent a sale going ahead. These are
criminal offences and the site owner, if convicted, can face an unlimited fine or even
imprisonment.
9.2 The types of things that are illegal include:
• Doing things that interfere with the peace or comfort of the occupation of the home,
such as blocking the entrance to the home, lighting bonfires in close proximity to it,
blocking out natural light;
• Withdrawing or withholding services or facilities, such as cutting off the water supply
or electricity when a home is being viewed or blocking car parking spaces;
• Making false or misleading representations, such as about the condition of the
home or a requirement to comply with banned rules.
9.3 The examples of what could constitute offences are not exhaustive and some may
constitute wider criminal conduct such as fraud, criminal damage or arson. Nor are such
offences only committed in connection with a sale of a home. For example, the offence
might be committed for the purpose of trying to get a resident to abandon the home or as a
means to coerce the owner to give it to the site owner or to prevent the resident from
taking a case against the site owner to a court or tribunal.
9.4 If you believe that an offence has been, or is being, committed with a view to prevent
your sale from going ahead you should in the first instance report the matter to your local
authority which has the power to investigate your complaint and take appropriate action
where there is evidence of a criminal offence - including a prosecution.
Odds Farm Estate. Wooburn Common Road, Wooburn Common, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, HP10 OJY
Contact: oddsfarmestate@oddsfarm.co.uk