Tax

Landlord Tax Return Guide — Self Assessment Property Pages Step by Step

How to complete the property pages of your Self Assessment tax return as a UK landlord — reporting rental income, claiming expenses, and avoiding common mistakes.

If you earn rental income from a UK property, you need to report it on your Self Assessment tax return. Here’s a step-by-step guide to completing the property pages correctly.

Do You Need to File?

Situation Need to file?
Rental income over £1,000/year Yes — register for Self Assessment
Rental income under £1,000/year No — covered by the £1,000 property income allowance
Using the property income allowance No — but you can’t also claim expenses
Made a rental loss Yes — must be reported to carry it forward
Rent-a-Room income under £7,500/year No — exempt under Rent a Room scheme
Overseas rental property Yes — use SA106 instead of SA105
Joint property ownership Yes — each owner reports their share

Key Dates

Deadline Date
Register for Self Assessment 5 October following the tax year
Paper return deadline 31 October following the tax year
Online return deadline 31 January following the tax year
Tax payment deadline 31 January following the tax year
Payments on Account (1st) 31 January
Payments on Account (2nd) 31 July

Step-by-Step: Completing SA105 (UK Property)

Section 1: Property Income

Box What to enter Notes
Box 1 Total rents and other income from property Gross rental income for the tax year
Include rent, ground rent received, service charges received
Don’t include the deposit (unless you kept it as income)

How to Calculate Rental Income

Include Don’t include
Rent received from tenants Tenant deposits (held for return)
Rent owed but not yet received (accruals basis) Deposits kept as income — these ARE included
Service charges received Insurance claim payouts (capital)
Ground rent received Sale of the property (this is CGT, not income)
Income from furnished holiday lets (if applicable)

Section 2: Property Expenses

Box Expense type Examples
Box 2 Rent, rates, and insurance Ground rent, council tax (if you pay it), landlord insurance
Box 3 Property repairs and maintenance Plumber, electrician, redecoration, replacing broken items
Box 4 Finance costs (non-residential only) Mortgage interest on commercial property only
Box 5 Legal, management, and other professional fees Letting agent fees, accountant, solicitor for tenancy disputes
Box 6 Cost of services provided Cleaning, gardening, communal area maintenance
Box 7 Travel Journeys to the property for management/repairs
Box 8 Other allowable expenses Advertising for tenants, stationery, phone calls

Allowable Expenses — Full List

Expense Deductible? Notes
Letting agent fees Yes Monthly management fee, tenant find fee
Landlord insurance Yes Buildings, contents, liability, rent guarantee
Ground rent Yes Leasehold properties
Service charges Yes If you pay them as landlord
Council tax Yes Only if you pay it (not if the tenant pays)
Utility bills Yes Only if you pay them (e.g. HMO)
Repairs and maintenance Yes Fixing, repairing, redecorating
Replacing furnishings Yes Replacement of Domestic Items Relief
Accountant fees Yes For property tax work
Legal fees (letting-related) Yes Drafting tenancy agreement, eviction costs
Advertising for tenants Yes Online listings, signage
Travel to property Yes Mileage or public transport for management visits
Phone and stationery Yes Reasonable proportion for property management
Mortgage interest (residential) No — tax credit only See Section 24 below
Mortgage interest (commercial) Yes Full deduction
Capital improvements No Adding something new is not a repair
Your own labour No You can’t charge for your own time
Pre-letting expenses Partly Only if incurred within 7 years of first letting

Repairs vs Improvements

Repair (deductible) Improvement (NOT deductible)
Fixing a broken boiler Installing a new boiler where none existed
Repainting walls Knocking walls down to create open-plan
Replacing broken windows with like-for-like Upgrading single glazing to double glazing
Fixing a leak in the roof Adding a loft conversion
Replacing worn carpet with similar quality Upgrading carpet to hardwood flooring
Replacing a broken washing machine Adding a dishwasher for the first time

Principle: A repair restores to its original condition. An improvement makes it better than before.

Section 3: Mortgage Interest Tax Credit (Section 24)

Box What to enter
Box 44 Total residential finance costs (mortgage interest, loan interest, arrangement fees)

This is NOT deducted as an expense. Instead, you receive a 20% tax credit on this amount.

Section 24 Impact by Tax Band

Tax band Effect
Basic rate (20%) No change — 20% relief matches 20% tax rate
Higher rate (40%) You pay 40% tax but only get 20% relief — net cost of 20% on mortgage interest
Additional rate (45%) You pay 45% tax but only get 20% relief — net cost of 25% on mortgage interest

Section 4: Calculating Profit or Loss

Calculation Formula
Total income (Box 1) e.g. £12,000
Minus total expenses (Boxes 2–8) e.g. £4,000
= Taxable profit e.g. £8,000
Minus loss brought forward From previous years
= Net profit Taxable amount
Tax credit (Box 44 × 20%) Reduces your tax bill (not your taxable income)

Example: Complete Tax Calculation

Item Amount
Annual rent received £12,000
Letting agent fee (10%) –£1,200
Insurance –£300
Repairs –£800
Other expenses –£200
Taxable profit £9,500
Mortgage interest paid £4,000
Tax credit (20% of £4,000) –£800
If basic rate taxpayer Calculation
Tax on £9,500 at 20% £1,900
Less Section 24 credit –£800
Tax to pay £1,100
If higher rate taxpayer Calculation
Tax on £9,500 at 40% £3,800
Less Section 24 credit –£800
Tax to pay £3,000

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake Consequence
Not registering for Self Assessment Late registration penalties
Deducting mortgage interest as an expense (residential) Incorrect return — HMRC will correct and may charge penalties
Claiming improvements as repairs HMRC can disallow and charge interest
Not reporting void periods correctly Income only includes rent actually due, not void months
Forgetting Payments on Account Unexpected cash flow demand in January and July
Not keeping records Must keep records for 5 years after the filing deadline

Record-Keeping

Record Keep for
Rental income records (bank statements, tenant payments) 5 years after filing deadline
Expense receipts and invoices 5 years
Mortgage statements 5 years
Tenancy agreements Duration of tenancy + 5 years
Inventory and condition reports Duration of tenancy + 5 years
Insurance policies 5 years