Your Right To Question Bills
Homeowners have the right to ask what a bill relates to, how it was calculated, what authority is relied upon, and why the charge has been applied to them. Questioning a bill is not unreasonable. It is a sensible and often necessary step where charges are unclear, disputed, or unsupported by proper explanation.
You are entitled to ask questions
A factor should be able to explain what a charge is for, how it arose, and why it is being sought from you.
Clarity matters
Vague descriptions, poor breakdowns, and unsupported figures are all reasons to seek proper explanation in writing.
Keep everything in writing
Written questions, written complaints, and written replies are often essential if the dispute later needs to be escalated.
Questions your are entitled to put
If you receive a bill or demand that you do not understand, there are a number of basic questions you are entitled to ask before deciding what to do next.
What exactly is this charge for?
Ask what work, service, repair, insurance item, or other cost the bill actually relates to.
What date or period does it relate to?
A charge should be capable of being linked to a relevant period, job, or invoice date.
What property, block, or common part does it concern?
You should be able to identify what part of the development or building the cost relates to.
How was my share calculated?
Ask for the basis on which the amount was apportioned to you and to other owners.
What authority is relied upon?
Ask what document, provision, deed, contract, Written Statement of Services, or other authority is said to justify the charge.
Can you provide the breakdown and supporting papers?
Ask for itemised information, invoices, quotations, contractor paperwork, or any relevant explanation.
Start with the key documents
A bill should not be looked at in isolation. Homeowners should compare it against the documents that are supposed to govern the factor’s authority and the services provided.
Written Statement of Services
This should explain what services are provided, how charges are worked out, how complaints are handled, and the basis on which the factor acts.
Title deeds or deed conditions
These may be highly relevant where liability, common parts, block-specific obligations, or apportionment are disputed.
Invoices, quotations, and correspondence
Bills should be checked against the papers said to support them, together with any earlier emails, notices, or explanations from the factor.
When a bill deserves closer scrutiny
Some charges raise obvious concerns and should not simply be accepted without further questioning.
What homeowners should do before escalating
The strongest approach is usually calm, specific, and written. The aim is to build a clear record.
Ask focused questions in writing
Identify the charge, the date, and exactly what you want explained. Keep your questions precise.
Request the supporting documents
Ask for the breakdown, invoices, quotations, authority relied upon, and any consultation record.
Check the Written Statement of Services and title position
Compare the bill against the documents said to govern the factor’s powers and your obligations.
Keep copies of everything
Save bills, emails, letters, notes, photographs, and any replies or complaint outcomes.
When to make a formal complaint
If your questions are ignored, answered vaguely, or dismissed without proper explanation, the next step may be a formal written complaint.
Be specific
Identify the bill, the charge, the problem, the dates involved, and why you say the response is inadequate.
Explain the effect on you
State clearly whether the issue has caused financial pressure, uncertainty, delay, inconvenience, or other impact.
Refer to the documents
Mention the Written Statement of Services, deeds, invoices, or correspondence that you say support your position.
Ask for a clear outcome
Say what you want: an explanation, a correction, a withdrawal of the charge, a revised apportionment, or a formal response.
Documents and information to gather
Before accepting or challenging a bill, ask yourself
- Do I understand exactly what this charge is for?
- Do I know what building, block, repair, or service it relates to?
- Have I seen the Written Statement of Services?
- Has the factor explained the authority for raising the charge?
- Have I asked for the breakdown and supporting paperwork?
- Does the allocation appear correct?
- Have I put my questions in writing?
- Have I kept copies of all replies and supporting documents?
- Do I now need to make a formal complaint?