Guide · Tax rules

Allowable expenses for UK landlords in 2026

What counts as a deductible expense against rental income, what doesn’t, and why the difference between a repair and an improvement matters more than landlords realise.

9 May 2026 · ~6 min read · Reviewed by a chartered accountant

The basic rule for property income is the same as the basic rule for self-employment: a cost is deductible if it’s incurred wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the property business. That single phrase, lifted from ITTOIA 2005 s272, is what every category below is testing for.

The categories that almost always work

Letting agent and property management fees

Fees paid to a letting agent — finder’s fees, ongoing management fees, tenancy renewal fees — are deductible. So are fees paid to a separate property management company.

Repairs and maintenance

Putting things back to working order: fixing a leaking tap, replacing a broken boiler, repainting after wear and tear, fixing a broken window, repairing a roof. These are revenue expenses and deductible in the year they’re incurred.

The line between a “repair” and an “improvement” is the single biggest source of error in landlord returns. We come back to this below.

Insurance

Buildings insurance, contents insurance (if you let furnished), public-liability insurance, rent guarantee insurance, legal expenses cover for landlords — all deductible.

Council Tax and utilities (when you pay them)

Where you pay these rather than the tenant — for example during a void period, or in an HMO where bills are included — they are deductible. Where the tenant pays directly, they’re not your expense to claim.

Mortgage interest, but with a catch

Mortgage interest on a residential BTL is not deducted from the rental profit. Instead, you receive a 20% basic-rate tax credit on it — see our separate guide to Section 24 for the full mechanics. Mortgage arrangement fees are treated as finance costs, the same way.

Legal and professional fees (sometimes)

Costs of drawing up a tenancy agreement, evicting a tenant, accountant’s fees for the property accounts, costs of recovering rent arrears — all deductible. Costs of acquiring the property (conveyancing, search fees, legal fees on purchase), or of selling it, are not deductible against rental income — they sit against capital gains.

Source: PIM2120.

Travel costs

Travel to and from your rental property for genuine business reasons (inspections, meeting a tradesperson, moving a tenant in) is deductible. HMRC’s simplified mileage rate (currently 45p per mile for the first 10,000 miles, 25p above that, in your own car) is the most common way to claim — keep a log.

Source: PIM2220.

Replacement of domestic items

For furnished lets, the cost of replacing furniture, white goods, carpets, kitchenware and similar is deductible in the year of replacement (Replacement of Domestic Items Relief). The initial furnishing of a previously-unfurnished property is not — it’s capital. Replacements with substantial improvements (a £200 microwave replaced with a £900 oven) get restricted to the like-for-like portion.

The category landlords get wrong: capital vs revenue

A repair restores something to the condition it was in. An improvement makes it better than it was. Repairs are deductible against rental income (revenue expenses). Improvements aren’t — they’re capital and only reduce the gain when you sell.

The hard cases:

Source: PIM2025; PIM2030.

Things that aren’t allowable

The £1,000 property allowance

If your gross rental income for the year is £1,000 or less, you don’t need to declare it at all — the property allowance covers it. If your gross income is above £1,000 but you don’t want to track expenses, you can elect to deduct a flat £1,000 allowance instead of actual expenses (called “partial relief”).

For most landlords with anything more than a single small rental, actual expenses give a bigger deduction than £1,000 — so the allowance is most useful for marginal cases (someone renting out a spare room or a parking space).

Source: ITTOIA 2005 s311.

Quarterly relevance under MTD ITSA

Under MTD ITSA, you submit a summary of income and expenses every quarter. The categorisation work — is this a repair or an improvement? a tenant-found fee or a sale fee? — happens at the quarterly submission rather than once a year. That’s the practical shift. Adjustments and reclassifications can still be made at the Final Declaration, but you’re no longer waiting until 31 January to think about any of it.

Records you need


Otto categorises every transaction

Otto reads your bank statement, tags each transaction (rent, repair, agent fee, mortgage, capital…), and shows the reasoning. Every borderline call — capital vs revenue, allowable vs personal — surfaces with the HMRC manual paragraph behind it, so you can review and override before submission.

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