Mortgages & Property
Holiday Let and Airbnb Property Guide UK — Rules, Tax, and Profitability
How to run a holiday let or Airbnb in the UK. Covers planning rules, tax treatment, mortgage implications, and whether it's profitable.
Short-term letting through platforms like Airbnb has become a popular way to earn income from property. But the rules around tax, planning, and regulation have tightened significantly. This guide covers what you need to know.
Types of Short-Term Let
| Type |
Description |
Typical platform |
| Letting rooms in your home |
Spare room while you live there |
Airbnb, SpareRoom |
| Letting your whole home while away |
Holiday, business travel |
Airbnb, Vrbo |
| Dedicated holiday let |
Property used solely for short-term lets |
Airbnb, Booking.com, Vrbo, Sykes |
| Holiday cottage / rural let |
Traditional holiday accommodation |
Sykes, Cottages.com, direct |
Planning Permission and Regulations
Do You Need Planning Permission?
| Situation |
Planning permission needed? |
| Letting your home while you’re away (occasional) |
Usually no |
| Letting your home in London 90+ nights/year |
Yes |
| Converting a property to full-time short-term let |
Usually yes — change of use |
| Rural holiday cottage (always been holiday use) |
Usually no |
| New build intended for holiday let |
Check local authority |
Registration and Licensing
| Area |
Requirements |
| England |
Short-term let registration scheme being introduced |
| Scotland |
Short-term let licence required (mandatory since 2023) |
| Wales |
Registration scheme in development |
| London |
90-night annual limit for entire home lets without planning permission |
Other Regulations
| Requirement |
Detail |
| Health & safety |
Fire alarms, carbon monoxide detectors, gas safety checks |
| Furniture fire safety |
Furnishings must meet fire safety regulations |
| Legionella risk assessment |
Recommended for all let properties |
| Insurance |
Standard home insurance won’t cover — specialist holiday let insurance needed |
| Building regulations |
Any conversions must comply |
Tax on Holiday Lets
Income Tax
| Situation |
Tax treatment |
| Income under £1,000 |
Covered by the trading allowance — tax-free |
| Income over £1,000 (Rent a Room) |
If letting rooms in your home, Rent a Room relief gives £7,500 tax-free |
| Income over thresholds |
Declare on self-assessment — taxed as income |
| Expenses |
Can deduct allowable expenses from your income |
Allowable Expenses
| Expense |
Deductible? |
| Mortgage interest |
Restricted to basic rate tax credit (20%) for residential lets |
| Insurance |
Yes |
| Cleaning and laundry |
Yes |
| Utilities |
Yes (for periods let) |
| Repairs and maintenance |
Yes |
| Platform fees (Airbnb 3%) |
Yes |
| Furnishings and replacements |
Yes (replacement furniture relief) |
| Advertising |
Yes |
| Agent/management fees |
Yes |
| Council tax / business rates |
Yes |
Furnished Holiday Letting (FHL) Regime Changes
The FHL tax regime provided extra benefits but is being abolished:
| FHL benefit |
Status |
| Capital allowances on furniture/equipment |
Being removed |
| Profits counted as pension-relevant earnings |
Being removed |
| Business Asset Disposal Relief (10% CGT) |
Being removed |
| Holdover relief on gifts |
Being removed |
| Mortgage interest fully deductible |
Being removed — will be restricted to 20% credit |
After the changes, holiday lets will be taxed the same as standard residential lettings.
Capital Gains Tax
| Scenario |
CGT treatment |
| Selling a holiday let (post-FHL changes) |
Standard residential rates: 18% (basic) / 24% (higher) |
| Annual exempt amount |
£3,000 (2026/27) |
| Main residence |
If it was never your main home, no Private Residence Relief |
Mortgage Implications
| Issue |
Detail |
| Standard residential mortgage |
Does not allow short-term letting |
| Buy-to-let mortgage |
May not allow holiday/Airbnb use — check terms |
| Holiday let mortgage |
Specialist mortgage — typically higher rates and larger deposits |
| Consent to let |
Some lenders grant temporary permission on residential mortgages |
| Deposit required |
Holiday let mortgages typically need 25%–35% |
Warning: Letting your property on Airbnb without the correct mortgage permission is a breach of your mortgage conditions and could lead to the lender demanding full repayment.
Council Tax vs Business Rates
| Situation |
What you pay |
| Property available to let 140+ days/year and actually let 70+ days |
Business rates (may qualify for small business rate relief = £0) |
| Property doesn’t meet the above thresholds |
Council tax |
| Second home (not being let) |
Council tax (often with a premium of up to 100%) |
Business rates can work in your favour — many holiday lets qualify for small business rates relief, meaning no rates to pay.
Costs of Running a Holiday Let
| Cost |
Typical amount |
| Mortgage |
£500–£1,500/month (depending on property and deposit) |
| Insurance (specialist) |
£300–£800/year |
| Utilities |
£100–£300/month |
| Cleaning (per changeover) |
£50–£150 |
| Maintenance and repairs |
£1,000–£3,000/year |
| Furnishing (initial) |
£3,000–£15,000 |
| Platform fees |
3%–15% of booking value |
| Management company (if used) |
15%–25% of income |
| Linen and consumables |
£500–£1,500/year |
Is It Worth It?
Example: Holiday Let in a Tourist Area
| Item |
Annual figure |
| Gross income (30 weeks at £800/week) |
£24,000 |
| Platform fees (3%) |
-£720 |
| Cleaning (30 changeovers × £100) |
-£3,000 |
| Utilities |
-£2,400 |
| Insurance |
-£500 |
| Maintenance |
-£2,000 |
| Mortgage interest |
-£9,000 |
| Net profit before tax |
~£6,380 |
Occupancy rates vary hugely by location and season. Peak-area properties in Cornwall, the Lake District, Edinburgh, and the Highlands do well. Less tourist-heavy areas may struggle.
Summary
| Topic |
Key point |
| Planning |
Check local rules — London has 90-night limit |
| Scotland |
Licence required |
| Tax |
FHL benefits being removed — taxed as standard let |
| Mortgage |
Must have correct permission |
| Business rates |
May qualify for relief = £0 |
| Profitability |
Location-dependent — factor in all costs |
| Insurance |
Standard home insurance won’t cover — get specialist cover |
Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.
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