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Expenses Landlords Typically Forget To Claim

Shared from Tax Insider: Expenses Landlords Typically Forget To Claim
By Lee Sharpe, September 2018
Lee Sharpe looks at some expenses that many landlords do not realise that they can claim.

This article will look at some of the expenses that are often missing in landlords’ expenses claims, so that they end up overpaying tax on their property profits or gains. 

We shall be looking at this primarily from the perspective of a buy-to-let (BTL) landlord who runs their own business, so is paying income tax; the rules can differ under corporation tax. There are also some differences between what most advisers would consider ‘normal’ expenses and those claimed under the newer ‘cash basis’.

Pre-letting expenses
I have often heard landlords say that their own accountant has advised them that expenses incurred before a newly-acquired property has been first let cannot be claimed. This is not true. There are two parts to this.

Firstly, the vast majority of landlords have only one property business for income tax purposes, even if they have several properties. There is only really one period before the property business starts, and that is before any property has been let. There is a specific provision in the tax code for expenses incurred before the letting business properly starts, which allows those expenses to roll up and be claimed on the day the business commences.

Secondly, while it is true that capital improvements should not be claimed as an ongoing expense in a property business, it is nonsense to suggest that maintenance expenses incurred before letting a newly-acquired property must be capital. A new ‘iceberg’ basement extension is, of course, capital and cannot be claimed (until the property is sold – see below); a lick of paint, repairing or replacing plumbing or kitchen fittings is just good manners.

Capital allowances
Everyone knows that you cannot claim capital allowances in a BTL business because they are available only to commercial properties and not to dwellings. But actually, the prohibition applies only to items used in dwellings let out in the property business. If the business has assets elsewhere, such as a computer, office equipment or tools, these are eligible for capital allowances (the rules for capital assets are dealt with differently under the cash basis). 

Office expenses
Capital items such as office equipment and furniture may have capital allowances claimed on them. But there are other office-related expenses, typically orienting around computer consumables, postage and stationery, which are often overlooked when calculating property business profits. 

Use of home as an office
The cost of operating a property business from one’s home should not be underestimated, either – although it easily can be if you use HMRC’s recommended £4 per week (for employees) or up to £26 a month (for the self-employed working from home under the simplified expenses regime). 

Strictly, neither of these published rates actually applies to landlords, although modest claims on such bases will normally be allowed. But the real cost of running a business from home can be much more substantial when considering that an appropriate percentage may be claimed of:
  • council tax;
  • mortgage interest or superior rent;
  • repairs;
  • heat, light and power; and
  • telephone and broadband costs (although these are often claimed separately).
Travelling
Where landlords let properties through an agent, business-related travelling costs may be minimal, and relate only to occasional visits to advisers, agents or to acquire stationery. But other landlords will visit their properties frequently, such as where they collect their own rents or do their own maintenance work. 

If a client lives overseas but occasionally travels to the UK specifically to deal with their property portfolio, travelling costs might be infrequent but very substantial – and still allowable. See, for example, the case Mallalieu v Drummond [1983] 2 AC 861, wherein LJ Brightman set out what I like to refer to as the ‘stethoscope versus Speedos test’

Abortive expenditure
Taxpayers often neglect to claim deductions for expenses that were unsuccessful, such as legal costs of evicting a bad tenant or pursuing debts. Whether or not the effort was successful is largely irrelevant. Simply put, it is not the outcome of the expenditure that matters, but the intention or purpose of the expenditure. 

Selling a property and capital gains tax
While landlords tend to focus on saving income tax and the ongoing costs of running a property business, there is also potentially a great deal of tax to be saved by ensuring all relevant costs are claimed on the capital disposal of a property. Capital gains tax (CGT) on residential property is as much as 28%, so reducing the capital gain with eligible costs is a worthwhile exercise.

Incidental costs of acquisition and sale
Typical costs of acquisition will include legal fees and stamp duty land tax (or equivalent). These should be added to the allowable cost of the property for CGT purposes.

Costs of disposal 
Costs incurred in disposing of the property are normally deducted from the proceeds of sale, so as to reduce the chargeable gain. They will commonly include: 
  • selling agents’ fees;
  • surveyor or valuation fees;
  • legal fees; and
  • other professional fees – including accountants’ fees (but only to the extent that they relate to ascertaining a property’s market value or to apportionment for the purposes of the computations).
Improvement costs
This is an area that often gets overlooked because:
  • many years may have elapsed since the costs were incurred; 
  • there may be an assumption that all costs will have been claimed against the ongoing property business income when incurred; or
  • having been told by one’s accountant/adviser years ago that the costs were not allowable, the landlord assumes that they are simply not allowable. The distinction, of course, is that the capital improvement costs will not have been allowable for income tax purposes as part of a property business, but are allowable as capital expenditure against the proceeds of sale for CGT purposes.’
Conclusion
There are several areas of expenditure that are often overlooked, either when working out the property business profits or the capital gain on sale. Particularly when it comes to a sale several years down the line, keeping decent books and records can be vitally important. 

Practical Tip:
One final point to bear in mind with regard to claiming for capital improvement costs is that the improvement must still be there at the time of the sale/disposal. For example, if Bill paid £20,000 to add a conservatory to one of his rental properties in 2005 and then knocked it down in 2016, he will get no reduction against his capital gain when he sells it in 2018 (although, if the conservatory were ugly enough, he might get a deduction for the costs of demolishing the conservatory, if he can say that removing the eyesore enhanced the property…?!).

Lee Sharpe looks at some expenses that many landlords do not realise that they can claim.

This article will look at some of the expenses that are often missing in landlords’ expenses claims, so that they end up overpaying tax on their property profits or gains. 

We shall be looking at this primarily from the perspective of a buy-to-let (BTL) landlord who runs their own business, so is paying income tax; the rules can differ under corporation tax. There are also some differences between what most advisers would consider ‘normal’ expenses and those claimed under the newer ‘cash basis’.

Pre-letting expenses
I have often heard landlords say that their own accountant has advised them that expenses incurred before a newly-acquired property has been first let cannot be claimed. This is not true. There are two parts to this.

Firstly, the
... Shared from Tax Insider: Expenses Landlords Typically Forget To Claim
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