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Holiday Lets Tax Deduction
21 Feb

Guide to Holiday Lets Tax Deduction


By:   Anam Rehman Growth Blog / Startup Blog / Tax Blog Comments:   No Comments

Letting a home for a short term might mean it qualifies for Holiday Lets Tax Deduction by being entitled to claim capital allowances. But are you entitled to claim them for periods when the property is empty?

Letting Conditions

If you’re lucky enough to own a holiday home which you rent out, you can take advantage of special tax treatment. To qualify as a furnished holiday let (FHL) the property must only be let for short periods at a time, no more than 31 days. Plus, it must also be available for and actually rented out to holidaymakers for a minimum period each tax year.

Capital Allowances

One advantage to meeting the FHL conditions is that the tax rules treat the rental business as a trade. This means you can claim capital allowances (CAs), HMRC’s equivalent to a deduction for depreciation, as an expense against rental income. CAs can’t usually be claimed against income derived from letting a residential property. However, there are one or two quirks to how CAs for FHLs are worked out.

Non-Qualifying Years

If in any year your property doesn’t meet the letting conditions mentioned above, CAs can’t be claimed. In fact, the rules say you should recalculate the CAs for the last year where the property counted as an FHL as if all the equipment used in the business were sold for the price you could expect to get on the open market. If in a later year the property again qualifies as an FHL, CAs can only be claimed on the depreciated value of the equipment.

Example. Bill owns a property that qualifies as an FHL for 2016/17, but not for 2017/18 and 2018/19. On the last day of 2016/17 the equipment’s sale value is £5,000. The property qualifies as an FHL again for 2019/20. The value of the equipment at the start of that year was £3,000. Bill can only claim CAs on that amount. This means he loses CAs on the £2,000 that the equipment depreciated by during the two years the property didn’t meet the FHL conditions. However, Bill can use a little-known HMRC concession to increase the CAs he can claim.

Tip. Instead of calculating CAs for 2016/17 as if he had sold the equipment, Bill can instead choose to ignore the two-year gap during which his property wasn’t an FHL. This means he can pick up his claim for CAs in 2019/20 where he left off. This means he won’t lose CAs on the £2,000.

Personal Use

The rules also say that if you use the property personally or make it available rent free to others, you must reduce your CAs claim proportionately. For example, if you use the property for a month, your CAs claim must be reduced by a twelfth.

Tip. Don’t make the mistake that many FHL owners do and reduce your CAs claim by comparing the time you use it personally to that when it’s let out as holiday accommodation. HMRC accepts that a vacant period counts as business use for the purpose of calculating CAs.

Example. Bill lets out his FHL for 26 weeks during 2017/18 and uses the property himself for three weeks. He can claim 49/52 of the CAs available for the year.

Anam Rehman

Anam Rehman

Director Operations & Finance

+44 (0)207 117 2639

info@chacc.co.uk

chacc.co.uk

Author Bio


Anam has a degree in accounting from the Prestigious St John’s University, and works as a senior director in Clear House.

Before working in Clear House, Anam worked in various commercial roles, the last one being the VP Operations for a prestigious business organisation,working on improving the organisation’s operational efficiency, growth and high level client management.

Anam manages clients ranging from software companies to large property developers and managers. Notably, she recently worked with a large property development company building large scale developments in London and the surrounding area.

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