Furnished Holiday Lettings - What Do You Need To Know?

At McDade Roberts we have many clients who have diverse property portfolios. Below we look at the rules surrounding furnished holiday lets.

At McDade Roberts we have many clients who have diverse property portfolios. Below we look at the rules surrounding furnished holiday lets.

Different tax rules apply to income from letting property, which is generally taxed under the property income rules. For many years, the Furnished Holiday Lettings (FHL) rules allowed holiday lettings of UK properties that met certain conditions to be treated as a trade for some specific tax purposes.

Qualifying Conditions For a Furnished Holiday Let

The property must be situated in the UK or elsewhere in the EEA. The EEA comprises the 27 states in the EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway.

Where there are properties in the UK and the EEA, they are to be treated as two separate property businesses with parallel provisions.

Accommodation is 'furnished' if the visitor is entitled to the use of furniture. There should be sufficient furniture provided for normal occupation.

The business must be carried on commercially. 'Commercially' means let on a commercial basis and with a view to making a profit. Close season lettings may produce no profit but normally help towards the cost of maintaining the property. This letting can still be treated as commercial. On the other hand, lettings to friends or relatives at zero or nominal rents are not commercial.

After you have decided that your accommodation meets these criteria you will need to see if the property then passes the qualifying tests:

  • Availability - The property must be available for commercial letting as holiday accommodation to the public for at least 210 days during the relevant period;
  • Letting - The property must be commercially let as holiday accommodation to members of the public for at least 105 days during the relevant period. A letting to the same person for longer than 31 continuous days (a period of longer term occupation) is not a letting as holiday accommodation for the purposes of this condition; and
  • Pattern of occupation - Total periods of longer term occupation must not exceed 155 days during the relevant period.

What Does It Mean If You Meet the FHL Conditions?

Holiday lettings that meet the relevant conditions can be treated as a trade for the following purposes:

  • Entitlement to plant and machinery capital allowances on furniture, white goods etc in the let property as well as on plant and machinery used outside the property (such as vans and tools). There are no capital allowances for the cost of the property itself or the land on which it stands;
  • Certain capital gains reliefs (including business asset roll-over relief, Entrepreneurs’ Relief, relief for gifts of business assets, relief for loans to traders); and
  • Profits count as relevant UK earnings when calculating the maximum relief due for an individual’s pension contributions.

Losses from an FHL business may only be carried forward against future profits from the same business. This means that profits and losses of a UK FHL and an EEA FHL need to be calculated separately.

How McDade Roberts Experience Can Help

At McDade Roberts we help clients with a wide range of business interests including furnished holiday lets. If you are considering buying a FHL or would like to discuss an existing property or portfolio, we help take the hassle out of the tax and reporting side of things. Call us. The first consultation is free so you have nothing to lose.