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Understanding your park home pitch agreement

Getting help with your pitch agreement

Get a copy of your agreement

You can ask the site owner for a copy of your pitch agreement. If they refuse, you can apply to the tribunal for an order requiring them to do so.

About tribunals

Find out more: tribunals for park home cases

Free help

You can get help about the agreement or written statement, and you should consider doing so if, for example:

  • you are not getting clear answers from the site owner
  • you do not understand the paperwork you’re being asked to sign
  • you feel pressured into agreeing to less than 28 days to review the written statement
  • the site owner’s right to the land or planning permission has an end date
  • the site owner asks you to sign a new agreement when you are buying from an existing owner
  • you want to change an express term in your agreement
  • you are at risk of losing your home – for example the site owner wants to end the pitch agreement or is threatening eviction

You can get free help from organisations like:

Using a solicitor

A solicitor can help too, but they will charge a fee. Fees vary. You can ask upfront how much they think it will cost. It’s best to use your own solicitor and not use the site owner’s.

Find out more: using a solicitor

Last updated:
16 June 2026
Next review:
16 June 2028
Buying a park home

The process for buying a park home from the site owner or a previous owner

Site rules and site licensing

Your rights and responsibilities including your pitch agreement, the site rules and licensing

Topic - Park homes
Pitch fees

How pitch fees are calculated and your rights if the site owner wants to increase the fee

Topic - Park homes