How Much Tax Do I Pay on Rental Income in the UK? (2026 Guide)
If you earn income from renting out property in the UK, you’ll usually need to pay tax on your rental profits. But how much tax do you actually pay on rental income?
The answer depends on:
Your total income
Your tax band
Your allowable expenses
Whether you own the property personally or through a limited company
In this guide, we explain exactly how rental income tax works in the UK for 2026 and show you how to estimate what you might owe.
Do You Pay Tax on Rental Income?
Yes. Rental income is taxable in the UK.
If you rent out:
A buy-to-let property
A former main residence
A room in your home (outside Rent-a-Room limits)
Commercial property
You must declare the income to HMRC through Self Assessment.
However, you are taxed on profit, not turnover.
What Counts as Rental Income?
Rental income includes:
Monthly rent payments
Non-refundable deposits
Fees paid by tenants
Payments for services (cleaning, gardening, utilities if included)
You must declare the total received in the tax year (6 April to 5 April).
How Is Rental Profit Calculated?
You don’t pay tax on the full rent received. You pay tax on:
Rental Income – Allowable Expenses = Taxable Profit
Common Allowable Expenses
You can usually deduct:
Letting agent fees
Repairs and maintenance (not improvements)
Landlord insurance
Council tax (if paid by you)
Utility bills (if paid by you)
Ground rent and service charges
Accountant fees
Replacement of domestic items (like sofas or appliances)
You cannot deduct:
Mortgage capital repayments
Property improvements (extensions, upgrades)
What About Mortgage Interest?
Since the mortgage interest relief changes introduced in 2020, landlords can no longer deduct mortgage interest as an expense.
Instead, you receive a 20% tax credit on your mortgage interest.
This makes a major difference for higher-rate taxpayers.
Example:
If:
Rental profit before mortgage interest = £15,000
Mortgage interest = £10,000
Old system: You would have been taxed on £5,000
New system: You are taxed on £15,000 and receive a 20% credit on £10,000 (£2,000)
If you’re a 40% taxpayer, this increases your tax bill.
Rental Income Tax Rates (2026)
Rental profit is added to your other income and taxed at normal income tax rates.
UK Income Tax Bands:
| Band | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| Personal Allowance (up to £12,570) | 0% |
| Basic Rate | 20% |
| Higher Rate | 40% |
| Additional Rate | 45% |
Your rental profit is stacked on top of your salary or other income.
Example 1: Basic Rate Taxpayer
Sarah earns:
£30,000 salary
£8,000 rental profit
Total income: £38,000
She remains in the basic rate band.
Rental tax = £8,000 × 20% = £1,600
Example 2: Higher Rate Taxpayer
James earns:
£55,000 salary
£12,000 rental profit
His rental income pushes him further into higher rate.
Rental tax = £12,000 × 40% = £4,800
(Plus mortgage interest restriction impact.)
What If You Own Property Jointly?
Rental profit is usually split according to ownership percentage.
Married couples default to 50/50 unless a Form 17 election is filed.
Unmarried owners are taxed based on actual ownership share.
Each owner reports their share via Self Assessment.
What About the £1,000 Property Allowance?
If your total rental income is under £1,000 per year, you may qualify for the Property Allowance.
You can either:
Deduct £1,000 instead of expenses, or
Use actual expenses (whichever is more beneficial)
If rental income is below £1,000 total, you may not need to declare it.
How Do You Pay Rental Income Tax?
You must:
Register for Self Assessment (if not already registered)
Submit a tax return by 31 January
Pay any tax due
If your tax bill exceeds £1,000, HMRC may require Payments on Account for the following year.
This catches many new landlords by surprise.
Do Limited Companies Pay Less Tax on Rental Income?
Some landlords operate through a limited company.
Limited Company Tax:
Profits taxed at Corporation Tax (currently 25%)
Mortgage interest fully deductible
Dividends taxed when withdrawn
This can be more tax efficient for higher earners but involves:
Higher mortgage rates
Additional accountancy costs
Administrative burden
Professional advice is strongly recommended before incorporating.
What If You Sell the Rental Property?
When you sell, you may owe Capital Gains Tax (CGT).
CGT depends on:
Gain made
Ownership period
Whether it was ever your main residence
Your tax band
If you’re selling a former home, Private Residence Relief may apply.
You must report residential property gains within 60 days of completion.
How to Reduce Rental Income Tax Legally
Some common tax planning strategies include:
Maximising allowable expenses
Pension contributions to reduce tax band
Spousal ownership planning
Considering limited company structures
Timing large repair works
Always ensure planning is compliant with HMRC rules.
Rental Income Tax Calculator (Estimate)
If you want to estimate how much tax you might pay:
Add your total income
Subtract allowable expenses
Apply the correct tax band
Adjust for mortgage interest credit
(You could internally link here to a future Rental Profit Tax Calculator UK.)
Key Takeaways
Rental income is taxable in the UK.
You are taxed on profit, not total rent received.
Mortgage interest is now restricted to a 20% tax credit.
Higher rate taxpayers are most affected.
Self Assessment filing is required.
Selling property may trigger Capital Gains Tax.
Disclaimer
This guide provides general information based on current UK tax rules and is not personal tax advice. Tax legislation changes and individual circumstances vary.
UK Tax & Salary Calculators
Our calculators help you estimate take-home pay, capital gains tax, and other common UK tax scenarios. Select the one you wish to try below: