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.
·5 min read
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