Home 5 Reports and Publications 5 Getting it right: Introducing and implementing a Community Right to Buy

Getting it right: Introducing and implementing a Community Right to Buy

Person sitting inside a hall at the Anstice.
This report offers detailed guidance for the Government on how to implement a Community Right to Buy. It is based on almost 10 years of knowledge working with communities and in-depth interviews with community leaders, politicians, civil servants and others.
Josh Westerling

Josh Westerling

Policy Manager

Across the country communities are being shut out as buildings are boarded up, destroyed or sold to developers and turned into spaces that fail to serve the needs of the local community. A Community Right to Buy could change this by allowing communities the right of first refusal when spaces with significant community value come up for sale, such as empty shops, pubs, and community spaces. If done right, it could help revamp high streets and protect vital community hubs.

This report offers detailed guidance for the Government on how to make a Community Right to Buy work for everyone. It is based on almost 10 years of knowledge working with communities as a think-do tank and funder, and in-depth interviews with community leaders, politicians, civil servants and others. It draws on learnings from Scotland, where the Community Right to Buy was introduced in 2003. And it outlines how government can build upon the Localism Act 2011, which introduced the Community Right to Bid, to make community ownership accessible for all communities.

Our learnings from this report

The report looks at the long history of communities seeking assets from landowners and authorities, and the benefits of doing so. It has 12 key recommendations for the Government to consider when implementing a Community Right to Buy.