Buy-to-Let Expenses and VAT
If you own residential rental property personally, you’ll already know the frustrating bit: residential rent is VAT exempt. That means you can’t reclaim VAT on repairs, maintenance or other costs. But if you also run a VAT-registered company, there might be a way to improve the position.
If you run multiple activities under one VAT registration, partial exemption rules apply.
If the VAT linked to your exempt activity (like residential letting) is:
- No more than £625 per month on average, and
- No more than 50% of your total input VAT
then you may be able to reclaim all your VAT; including the VAT relating to the rental property.
But, for VAT purposes, you and your company are separate legal entities. So if you personally own the property, your company can’t simply reclaim the VAT on its costs. The activities have to belong to the same taxable person.
So what should you do? Rather than transferring the property into the company (which can trigger other tax issues), you could grant your company a lease over the property.
The company then becomes the landlord, manages the property, and the rental activity falls within the company’s VAT registration. But if your property costs are likely to regularly exceed the 50% rule, this approach may not work.
You could structure the lease with a lump sum payment and a low annual rent. Part of that may be treated as capital and, if it falls within your annual CGT exemption, could be largely tax-free.
With careful structuring and planning, you can turn a VAT cost into a VAT saving! Give Rustrick Accountants a call on 01622 738165 and we can help you save money today.










