What Can Landlords Claim Against Tax?
If you let out property in the UK, the difference between a comfortable return and a disappointing one often comes down to one thing: knowing exactly what you can and cannot claim against your rental income. Every pound of legitimate expense you fail to record is a pound you pay tax on unnecessarily. Yet many landlords either miss valid deductions or, worse, claim costs that HMRC will later disallow.
This post looks at how some landlord tax deductions work in 2026, who they apply to, the rules that catch people out, and the practical steps you can take to keep more of your rental profit while staying firmly on the right side of His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs.
Who this applies to
These rules apply to anyone earning income from letting UK residential property as an individual, including:
- Buy-to-let landlords with one property or a large portfolio
- Accidental landlords letting a former home
- Landlords letting rooms, flats, or houses on standard residential tenancies
- Joint owners splitting rental profits
- Former furnished holiday let owners, now treated as ordinary residential lets following the abolition of the FHL regime on 6 April 2025
If you hold property through a limited company, the rules differ in important ways, particularly around mortgage interest. We cover that distinction below, but most of this guide is written for individual landlords reporting through Self Assessment.
What counts as an allowable expense?
HMRC allows you to deduct costs that are incurred wholly and exclusively for the purpose of renting out your property. In plain terms, the expense has to relate to the running of your rental business, not to your personal life or to improving the property’s underlying value.
The most commonly claimed deductions include:
- Repairs and maintenance such as fixing a boiler, repainting, replacing broken windows, or mending a leaking roof (but not improvements, which we explain below)
- Letting agent and management fees
- Accountancy fees for preparing your rental accounts and Self Assessment return
- Buildings and contents insurance, plus specialist landlord or rent guarantee policies
- Ground rent and service charges on leasehold properties
- Council tax and utility bills where you, rather than the tenant, pay them
- Legal and professional fees for tenancy agreements and renewals (though not for the initial purchase)
- Advertising for new tenants
- Direct property costs such as cleaning, gardening, and gas safety certificates
You can find HMRC’s official list of allowable property expenses in its guidance on working out your rental income.
Repairs versus improvements: the distinction that trips landlords up
This is one of the most misunderstood areas of landlord tax, and getting it wrong can lead to a disallowed claim or a missed one.
A repair restores something to its original condition and is deductible against your rental income in the year you pay for it. An improvement enhances the property beyond its previous state and is treated as capital expenditure, which you generally cannot deduct from rental income. Instead, you may be able to offset it against any Capital Gains Tax bill when you eventually sell.
Replacing a worn-out kitchen with a similar standard one is usually a repair. Ripping out a basic kitchen and installing a high-specification one is an improvement. The test is whether you have restored or upgraded.
Modern equivalents matter here. Replacing single-glazed windows with double glazing is normally accepted as a repair, because double glazing is now the standard like-for-like replacement, even though it is technically an upgrade. HMRC explains the boundary in its Property Income Manual (PIM2030).










