regulation 10(p)
(a) energy performance, environmental impact or sustainability;
(b) potential or actual environmental hazards that might affect the property or its occupants;
(c) the price at which—
(i) the property is available for sale; or
(ii) was previously sold;
(d) the length of time the property has been available for sale either generally or through a particular person;
(e) location or address;
(f) aspect, view, outlook or environment;
(g) proximity and identity of local services, facilities or amenities;
(h) Welsh speaking communities in the local area;
(i) the use of the Welsh language;
(j) the property’s contents, fixtures or fittings;
(k) history of the property, including age, ownership or use of the property or land on which it is or will be situated;
(l) tenure or estate;
(m) application of any statutory provision which restricts the use of land or which requires it to be preserved or maintained in a specified manner;
(n) existence or nature of any restrictive covenants, or of any restrictions on resale, restrictions on use or pre-emption rights;
(o) existence of any easements, servitudes or wayleaves;
(p) any information held or provided by the Chief Land Registrar relating to the property;
(q) equitable interests in the property;
(r) rights of way or access to or over—
(i) the property (not including any ancillary land); or
(ii) land outside the property;
(s) rights of way or access to or over any ancillary land to the property including—
(i) obligations to maintain such land; or
(ii) whether any payments for maintaining such land are outstanding;
(t) obligations to maintain the boundaries of the property;
(u) communications from any public authority or person with statutory functions, that affect or might affect the property, including whether any request made by them (under any enactment or otherwise) has been complied with;
(v) acquisition of any land by a public authority or person with statutory functions that affects or might affect the property;
(w) standards of safety, building, repair or maintenance to which the property, its contents or the building in which it is situated ought to comply, and whether such standards have been complied with;
(x) the property’s suitability or potential suitability for occupancy by a disabled person;
(y) alterations or other works relating to the property and —
(i) the date or approximate date they occurred;
(ii) whether any necessary permissions for such alterations or works have been obtained; or
(iii) whether relevant consultations have been conducted;
(z) identity of a person by whom the property, its fixtures or components were designed, constructed, built, produced, treated, processed, repaired, reconditioned or tested;
(aa) measurements of the property;
(bb) use or occupation of the property or use or occupation of other premises which affects or might affect the property;
(cc) insurance policies, warranties, certificates or guarantees for the property or its contents;
(dd) utility services connected to the property;
(ee) taxes, levies or charges relating to the property; and
(ff) information of any type mentioned in this Schedule relating to neighbouring, adjoining or nearby land or premises.
(This note is not part of the Regulations)
These Regulations prescribe the documents to be included in home information packs and the circumstances in which they are included (Parts 1 to 5 of the Regulations). They provide for exceptions and enforcement (Parts 6 and 7) and make further provision in relation to home condition reports (Parts 8 and 9). The duties to have a home information pack which complies with these Regulations are found in sections 155 to 159 of the Housing Act 2004 (“the home information pack duties”). The Regulations apply in England and Wales. Under regulation 2, the Home Information Pack Regulations 2006 are revoked.
The Regulations make a distinction between “required” documents which must be included in home information packs and “authorised” documents which may be included. A pack must not include any documents not required or authorised (regulation 5) and advertising information must not be included (regulation 13). Part 2 of the Regulations makes provision about the source and clarity of documents included in the original home information pack, and in copies of a pack.
Regulations 9, 10 and 11 are the regulations that set out which documents are required and authorised to be included in packs. The required documents specified in regulation 9 include an index, information about the energy efficiency of the property, a sale statement, title information, additional information for commonhold and leasehold properties and property searches. Schedules 1 to 11 to the Regulations make further provision about these documents, and in some cases prescribe minimum terms necessary for documents to comply with the Regulations. Not all documents are required in every case, and regulation 9 describes this further.
Regulation 10 describes the information authorised to be included in a home information pack. This information may be included in a separate document or within a required document. Authorised information includes a home condition report, translations, Braille versions, summaries or explanations of pack documents, additional title information, additional information relating to commonhold and leasehold properties and additional information about physical condition. It includes further property searches. Searches relating to other premises may be included. Schedule 11 to the Regulations specifies a number of other types of relevant information which may be included. Regulation 11 deals with the required information for new properties where the legal commonhold or leasehold interest being sold has not yet been registered or created.
Part 4 of the Regulations deals with the assembly of home information packs. Regulation 14 prescribes the required order of documents included in a pack and regulation 16 requires that certain documents must be no more than 3 months old at the “first point of marketing” (defined in regulation 4). Under regulations 15, 17 and 18, some required documents must be included before the “first point of marketing” and others should be included within 28 days of that point. In the circumstances specified in regulations 17 and 18 a home information pack temporarily need not include a particular document, so long as reasonable efforts are being made to obtain it. Regulations 19 and 20 make provision for requests for and delivery of documents in relation to the obtaining of documents under Part 4. Regulation 21 makes provision for the event that a document is completely unobtainable.
Part 5 of the Regulations deals with the accuracy of home information packs. Regulations 22 to 24 deal with the circumstances in which the pack or pack documents must or may be updated. The effect of regulation 25 is that a responsible person must provide a seller with a copy of any pack documents requested by him for the purposes of checking their accuracy.
Part 6 of the Regulations makes exceptions from the home information pack duties. These exceptions relate to seasonal accommodation, sales mixed with sales of non-residential premises, dwelling houses used for both residential and non-residential purposes, portfolios of residential properties, unsafe properties and properties to be demolished. The exception under regulation 34 deals with a transitional period starting on 1st June 2007 and ending on 31st December 2007. It ensures that where a person makes public that a property is on the market during the transitional period, a person does not become a responsible person for the purposes of the home information pack duties if it was put on the market before the period, so long as marketing was sustained to a reasonable extent before 1st June 2007. It also deals with the circumstances where the home information pack duties do not arise by putting the property on the market during the transitional period, provided that the property was first put on the market before the period and an offer to buy the property was withdrawn (or its acceptance repudiated).
Part 7 of the Regulations specifies that the level of penalty charge for penalty charge notices which may be given by enforcement authorities is £200 (for a breach of a home information pack duty). Regulation 36 specifies that penalty charge notices do not apply where the content of a pack document fails to comply with these Regulations, but a responsible person believes on reasonable grounds that it does.
The Regulations require that home condition reports (which may be included in home information packs under regulation 10(a)) must be made by members of certification schemes (home inspectors) approved by the Secretary of State under Part 8. Before approving a scheme, the Secretary of State must be satisfied that it contains appropriate provision for the matters described in regulation 37.
Part 9 of the Regulations makes provision for the keeping of a register of home condition reports and the circumstances in which information may be disclosed from that register. Under section 165(7) of the Housing Act 2004, a disclosure from a register which is not in accordance with regulations is a criminal offence.
A full regulatory impact assessment of the effect that this instrument will have on businesses has been prepared and placed in the libraries of both Houses of Parliament. Copies of the regulatory impact assessment and guidance related to these Regulations will be available at the Department for Communities and Local Government’s website and from its Home Information Pack Implementation Division (telephone: 020 7944 6211, fax: 020 7944 3408 and e-mail: homeinfopacks@communities.gsi.gov.uk).