02: Tax and your property

1. The next time you move house, you could let out, rather than sell, your old home so that the rent covers the mortgage interest and other expenses. This may be particularly appropriate given the current uncertainties in the property market. When you eventually sell this property, the proportion of the gain relating to the period when it was occupied as your main home will be exempt from tax. In addition, you can claim a further tax exemption of up to £40,000 per owner because the property has been let. With the benefit of all these reliefs, you might find that the gain on the let property is more or less tax free. Any remaining gain is taxed at 18%.

2. Pass on a let property to fund future income needs.
Students need an income stream and a let property can provide that. The gift of the property is treated as a sale at market value for tax purposes. But where the current value is low, the gain will be small and may be covered by your annual exemption of £10,100 (for 2009/10).

3. Keep your tenants warm and save tax at the same time. As a landlord, you can claim a special tax allowance of up to £1,500 per property, giving you immediate tax relief for your expenditure on energy-saving insulation. This includes loft, wall, floor or hot water system insulation installed in residential properties. This is a one-off allowance for expenditure before 6 April 2015.

4. Let rooms in your own home. The income is completely tax free up to £4,250 per property. If the rent is higher than this, check whether the normal approach of paying tax on the income after deducting allowable expenses is more tax-efficient than claiming the exemption of £4,250.Last Updated 

The FSA does not regulate taxation advice and some aspects of buy to let arrangements.

Levels, bases of and reliefs from taxation may be subject to change.

The value of your investment can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount invested

Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. There may be a fee for mortgage advice, the precise amount of the fee will depend upon your circumstances but we estimate that it will be £250