Holiday Lets – the demise of tax concessions
It was announced as part of the Spring Budget measures that the present favourable tax benefits presently allowed for the letting of properties as short-term holiday lets – known as the furnished holiday lettings (FHL) tax regime – is to be abolished from April 2025. The Labour government has confirmed that these changes will take effect as planned.
HMRC has now published a policy paper providing further details of how these changes will work in practice.
The policy paper states that the changes will remove the tax advantages that current furnished holiday let landlords have received over other property businesses in four key areas by:
- applying the finance cost restriction rules so that loan interest will be restricted to basic rate for Income Tax;
- removing capital allowances rules for new expenditure and allowing replacement of domestic items relief;
- withdrawing access to reliefs from taxes on chargeable gains for trading business assets; and
- no longer including this income within relevant UK earnings when calculating maximum pension relief.
After repeal, former FHL properties will form part of the person’s UK or overseas property business and be subject to the same rules as non-furnished holiday let property businesses.
There is also an anti-forestalling rule that prevents the obtaining of a tax advantage through the use of unconditional contracts to obtain capital gains relief under the current FHL rules. This rule applies from 6 March 2024.
The loss of the special tax regime for holiday lets is expected to have a significant effect on many of those involved with the short-term holiday rental business in the UK.