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Autumn Statement ‘missed opportunity’ to support buy-to-let landlords

Buy-to-let landlords have been left disappointed at the 'missed opportunity' in the Autumn Statement to support those that invest in the private rented sector, with no change to stamp duty or the planned alterations to mortgage interest relief.

Stamp duty

Stamp duty reforms announced by the previous chancellor George Osborne have slowed the housing market and raised half as much money as the Treasury predicted, it has emerged, and so it is unsurprising that there were calls for the new chancellor to review the tax.

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The Exchequer received £370m less in stamp duty than the £700m it expected following major changes made by Osborne, fresh analysis reveals. 

One way to help get the market moving again would have been to amend or abolish the 3% stamp duty surcharge on buy-to-let properties and second homes.

Following a stampede of buy-to-let activity earlier this year ahead of the introduction of the higher tax on additional homes in April, fewer investors are now adding to their property portfolios. 

The latest seasonally adjusted monthly figures compiled by the Council of Mortgage Lenders show that the amount buy-to-let landlords borrowed fell on an annual basis, dropping 22% year-on-year to £2.8bn in September with the number of loans falling 6% from the previous month to 18,200 and representing a decline of 26% on September 2015.

Understandably, buy-to-let landlords wanted to see the 3% stamp duty surcharge on second homes, including buy-to-let properties, scrapped by the chancellor Philip Hammond, but unfortunately that did not happen.

“Slashing the rate of stamp duty would have been Philip Hammond’s single most effective fix for UK finances,” said Anthony Hesse, managing director, Property Personnel. “There is no more economically stimulating activity than house sales and purchases - so it would have been a tax cut that would largely have paid for itself. As a result, the continued stifling of the market is a missed opportunity for both the estate agency sector and the country.”

Tax relief changes

Some 440,000 basic-rate tax payers will be forced into a higher tax bracket from April 2017 once planned changes to landlord taxation comes in to force, according to the National Landlord Association (NLA).

As many of you will know, the existing rules that permit landlords to offset all of their mortgage interest against tax will, from April 2017, be phased out, restricting the amount of mortgage interest landlords can offset against tax on their property investments.

By April 2020, once they have been withdrawn altogether, the disastrous consequences of Section 24 will mean that it is likely that higher-rate tax payers will only receive 50% of the relief that they currently get, with various experts having already warned that landlords will be left with little alternative but to pass higher costs on to tenants.

“This [tax] policy will push 44% of basic rate tax-paying landlords into a higher bracket, forcing them to either sell up and end perfectly happy tenancies, or increase rents,” said Richard Lambert, chief executive officer at the NLA. 

Amid reports that many buy-to-let landlords plan to increase rents to offset tax hikes from April next year, James Davis, CEO and founder of Upad, last week said that he feared that tenant defaults could soar because many renters will struggle to meet inflated rent prices, and that was before it was announced that letting agents in England will be banned from charging fees to tenants, which could result in even higher rent increases.

Want to comment on this story? If so...if any post is considered to victimise, harass, degrade or intimidate an individual or group of individuals on any basis, then the post may be deleted and the individual immediately banned from posting in future.

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    I'm a landlord and am in the process of buying my fourth house. I don't make any profit short term as the rent pays the mortgage. I'm self employed and don't have a pension. I'm using the house purchase as my pension for when I retire. Any costs incurred e.g extra tax etc will be passed on to the tenant. Most tenants are struggling to save for a house as it is, increased costs will surely prevent them from buying their own home. Paul. Nottingham

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    I'm in the same position as you, Paul, and I will do exactly the same.

    I have been a landlord since the early 90's. In the past I shouldered the cost of astronomical interest rates which meant I sometimes had to subsidise rental properties from my personal income, been through 2 major recessions, taken on the substantial risk posed by every additional mortgage and have always provided value for money because what is a business to me is, after all, a home to someone else.

    All the way through, the government has done absolutely nothing to assist and - in recent years - has piled on legislation and most recently taxation, all of which increases my costs. Well....I'm done with being bled by the authorities. So from now on, all increases in cost will be passed on to tenants, full stop. No more squeezing my profit margin. Those who can't afford it can go to the local authority. See how Mr Hammond likes being a landlord, eh?

     
  • Mark Hempshell

    It seems like the Govt decided years ago it doesn't want local authorities to house people. Now they've decided they don't want the PRS to do it either. So who's going to do it then?

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