Furnished Holiday Lettings

by | Jan 5, 2023

Different tax rules apply to income from letting property, which is generally taxed under the property income rules. For many years, the Furnished Holiday Lettings (FHL) rules allowed holiday lettings of UK properties that met certain conditions to be treated as a trade for some specific tax purposes.

One important consideration is the VAT treatment of FHL income. Whilst residential letting income is exempt from VAT, the FHL income follows the same VAT treatment as hotel accommodation, B&Bs etc. which is subject to VAT at the standard rate (currently 20%). Therefore, a FHL business with turnover above £85,000 would need to be registered for VAT and all FHL income would then be subject to VAT at 20%.”

Qualifying conditions

The property must be situated in the UK or elsewhere in the EEA. The EEA comprises the 27 states in the EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway.

Where there are properties in the UK and the EEA, they are to be treated as two separate property businesses with parallel provisions.

Accommodation is ‘furnished’ if the visitor is entitled to the use of furniture. There should be sufficient furniture provided for normal occupation.

The business must be carried on commercially. ‘Commercially’ means let on a commercial basis and with a view to making a profit. Close season lettings may produce no profit but normally help towards the cost of maintaining the property.  This letting can still be treated as commercial. On the other hand, lettings to friends or relatives at zero or nominal rents are not commercial.

After you have decided that your accommodation meets these criteria you will need to see if the property then passes the qualifying tests:

Availability. The property must be available for commercial letting as holiday accommodation to the public for at least 210 days during the relevant period;

Letting. The property must be commercially let as holiday accommodation to members of the public for at least 105 days during the relevant period. A letting to the same person for longer than 31 continuous days (a period of longer term occupation) is not a letting as holiday accommodation for the purposes of this condition; and

Pattern of occupation. Total periods of longer term occupation must not exceed 155 days during the relevant period.

Effect of meeting the conditions

Holiday lettings that meet the relevant conditions can be treated as a trade for the following purposes:

  • Entitlement to plant and machinery capital allowances on furniture, white goods etc in the let property as well as on plant and machinery used outside the property (such as vans and tools). There are no capital allowances for the cost of the property itself or the land on which it stands;
  • Certain capital gains reliefs (including business asset roll-over relief, Entrepreneurs’ Relief, relief for gifts of business assets, relief for loans to traders); and
  • Profits count as relevant UK earnings when calculating the maximum relief due for an individual’s pension contributions.

Losses from an FHL business may only be carried forward against future profits from the same business. This means that profits and losses of a UK FHL and an EEA FHL need to be calculated separately.

There is no restriction on the deductibility of mortgage interest incurred in relation to the FHL business.

Holiday lettings where the property is situated outside the EEA do not qualify under the FHL rules. Instead, they are taxed under the normal property income rules.

Relevant periods

There are three possible 12-month periods that may count as relevant periods for a FHL property:

  • starting 12 months beginning with the day on which it is first let as furnished accommodation
  • ceasing 12 months ending with the last day on which it is let as furnished accommodation
  • continuing: if neither of the above apply, the tax year itself.

Examples of relevant periods

1) A property has been let furnished on a commercial basis since 2009. For 2019-20 the tests are applied to the year of assessment 2019-20 itself.

2) A property is acquired on 1 January 2019 and is let furnished on a commercial basis from 1 March 2020. To determine whether the letting qualifies for 2019-20 the tests are applied to the 12 months from 1 March 2020. For 2020-21 the tests are applied to the tax year itself.

3) A property has been let as furnished accommodation on a commercial basis for many years but letting ceases on 30 September 2019 and the property is sold on 1 December 2019. To see if 2019-20 qualifies, the tests are applied to the 12 months ended on 30 September 2019.

Occupancy Threshold

There are two elections you can make to help you reach the occupancy threshold.  If you have more than one property the ‘averaging’ election might be helpful and if you have a property that reaches the occupancy threshold in some years but not in others you could use a ‘period of grace’ election to help you to reach the threshold.

As regards averaging, where a person has a number of units of accommodation that are let for holiday purposes:

  • each of them must separately satisfy the availability condition and the pattern of occupation condition, but
  • if some are individually let for less than 105 days, the landlord is allowed to apply the letting condition to the average rate of occupancy of the units
  • A unit cannot be used more than once in the same period in a claim for averaging treatment
  • You can only average across the properties in a single business – you cannot mix UK and EEA properties.

Example illustrating the averaging rule

Joe lets four holiday cottages during 2019-20, and all would otherwise qualify as furnished holiday lettings. The actual letting periods are:

No 1 140 days
No 2 128 days
No 3 120 days
No 4 100 days
Total 488 days
Average 488 ÷ 4 = 122 days

By averaging the four, all will qualify. Without averaging, No 4 would not qualify.

Period of grace

In addition to the option to use averaging to help meet the occupation threshold there is also the possibility of making an election for a ‘period of grace’.

A period of grace election allows you to treat a year as a qualifying FHL year where you genuinely intended to meet the occupancy threshold but were unable to meet it.  In order to qualify for this, the property must have reached the occupancy threshold in the previous year, either on its own or because of an averaging election. If the property still does not meet the occupancy threshold in the year after that, providing an election has been made for the earlier year, this can also be treated as a qualifying FHL year.

Example – period of grace

Nalini lets a property in Italy and it would otherwise qualify as an FHL.  The actual lettings periods are:

Year Days let Election? Qualifies?
2019-20 110 None required Yes
2020-21 73 Yes Yes
2021-22 80 Yes Yes
2022-23 106 None required Yes

Nalini qualifies in all four years.

If the property still doesn’t meet the required letting level in the fourth year (after two years of being treated as qualifying) then that property is no longer an FHL property.

The property must meet the availability threshold (and the pattern of occupation test).  You must be able to show that there was a genuine intention to let the property in the year for which a period of grace election is made.  For example, where you have marketed a property to the same or a greater level than in successful years this might be used as evidence of a genuine intention to let.

If the lettings are cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances, for example, because of extreme adverse weather conditions or an outbreak of foot and mouth disease, then it is likely that you would be able to say that there had been a genuine intention to let.

If you have more than one FHL property, sometimes both averaging and period of grace elections may be used to ensure a property continues to qualify.

Limited companies

The FHL provisions apply to both individuals and companies, although clearly many of them apply only to individuals. However, capital gains exemption for disposals by companies with substantial shareholdings may also apply. Changes in provisions for corporation tax normally run with the financial year (starting on 1 April) rather than the tax year (starting on 6 April), and the April dates mentioned in the text should be read accordingly.

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