Savings & Investing
REITs Guide UK — Property Investing Without Buying Property
How Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) work in the UK, how to invest, tax treatment, top UK REITs, and the pros and cons compared to buying property directly.
REITs let you invest in property without the huge deposit, tenant hassle, or maintenance costs. Here’s how they work.
What Is a REIT?
| Feature |
Detail |
| Definition |
A company that owns and manages income-producing property |
| Listed on |
London Stock Exchange (UK REITs) |
| Minimum dividend payout |
Must distribute at least 90% of rental profits |
| Tax at company level |
Exempt from corporation tax on qualifying rental income and gains |
| How to invest |
Buy shares through any stockbroker or platform |
| Minimum investment |
Price of one share (often £1–£20) |
How REITs Work
| Step |
Detail |
| 1 |
REIT raises money by selling shares to investors |
| 2 |
Uses the money to buy and manage properties |
| 3 |
Collects rent from tenants |
| 4 |
Distributes at least 90% of rental profits to shareholders as dividends |
| 5 |
Shareholders receive regular income and can benefit from capital growth if the share price rises |
Types of UK REITs
| Sector |
What they own |
Examples |
| Commercial office |
Office buildings |
British Land, Derwent London, Great Portland Estates |
| Retail |
Shopping centres, retail parks |
Hammerson, Capital & Regional |
| Industrial/logistics |
Warehouses, distribution centres |
Segro, Tritax Big Box |
| Residential |
Rental homes, build-to-rent |
Grainger, PRS REIT |
| Healthcare |
Care homes, hospitals, GP surgeries |
Primary Health Properties, Assura, Target Healthcare |
| Student accommodation |
Purpose-built student housing |
Unite Group, Empiric Student Property |
| Self-storage |
Self-storage facilities |
Big Yellow, Safestore |
| Data centres |
Server farms and data centres |
Various (more common in US) |
| Diversified |
Mix of property types |
Land Securities, British Land |
Top UK REITs
| REIT |
Sector |
Typical dividend yield |
Market cap |
| Land Securities |
Diversified (offices, retail) |
~5–6% |
~£5bn |
| British Land |
Diversified (offices, retail, logistics) |
~5–6% |
~£4bn |
| Segro |
Industrial/logistics |
~3–4% |
~£10bn |
| Unite Group |
Student accommodation |
~3–4% |
~£4bn |
| Primary Health Properties |
Healthcare (GP surgeries) |
~5–6% |
~£2bn |
| Tritax Big Box |
Logistics warehouses |
~4–5% |
~£3bn |
| Grainger |
Residential (PRS) |
~3–4% |
~£2bn |
| Big Yellow |
Self-storage |
~3–4% |
~£2bn |
| Assura |
Healthcare |
~5–6% |
~£1.5bn |
| Safestore |
Self-storage |
~3–4% |
~£1.5bn |
Yields and market caps are illustrative and fluctuate.
Tax Treatment
Outside a Tax Wrapper
| Dividend type |
Tax treatment |
| Property Income Distribution (PID) |
Taxed as property income at your marginal rate (20%, 40%, or 45%). 20% is withheld at source. Does NOT use the £500 dividend allowance |
| Ordinary dividend (non-PID) |
Taxed at dividend rates (8.75%, 33.75%, 39.35%). Uses the £500 dividend allowance |
| Capital gains (selling shares at a profit) |
CGT at 18% (basic rate) or 24% (higher rate), with £3,000 annual exempt amount |
Inside a Tax Wrapper
| Wrapper |
Tax on dividends |
Tax on gains |
| ISA |
None |
None |
| SIPP/pension |
None |
None |
| LISA |
None (plus 25% government bonus) |
None |
Bottom line: Hold REITs in an ISA or SIPP where possible to avoid dividend tax on PIDs.
REITs vs Buy-to-Let
| Factor |
REITs |
Buy-to-let |
| Minimum investment |
~£1–£20 (one share) |
£25,000–£75,000+ (deposit) |
| Diversification |
Instant — across many properties |
One property (unless very wealthy) |
| Liquidity |
Sell shares instantly |
Selling a property takes weeks/months |
| Management |
Professional managers handle everything |
You manage (or pay an agent 8–15%) |
| Leverage (mortgage) |
Not available (unless CFDs/spread betting — high risk) |
Yes — magnifies gains AND losses |
| Stamp duty |
0.5% (standard share dealing) |
3–5%+ surcharge on additional properties |
| Income yield |
3–7% gross |
3–6% gross (before costs) |
| Running costs |
Platform fee only (0.1–0.45%) |
Maintenance, insurance, void periods, letting fees, mortgage interest |
| Tax on income |
PID taxed as property income (0% in ISA) |
Rental income taxed at marginal rate, mortgage interest relief capped at 20% |
| Capital gains |
CGT on gains (0% in ISA) |
CGT at 18% or 24% (no ISA wrapper available) |
| Hassle |
None |
Significant (tenants, repairs, regulations, void periods) |
REITs vs Property Funds
| Factor |
REITs (listed) |
Property funds (open-ended) |
| Pricing |
Real-time share price |
Priced daily (with potential lag) |
| Liquidity |
Instant — buy/sell on stock exchange |
Can have dealing delays or redemption gates (seen in 2016, 2020, 2022) |
| Volatility |
Higher — share price moves with stock market sentiment |
Lower day-to-day, but liquidity risk in crises |
| Discount/premium to NAV |
Often trades at a discount to net asset value |
Priced at NAV (but may gate) |
| Cost |
Low (platform fee + dealing charge) |
OCF typically 0.5–1.5% |
REIT Funds and ETFs
| Fund/ETF |
What it holds |
OCF |
| iShares UK Property ETF (IUKP) |
Diversified UK REITs |
~0.40% |
| L&G UK Property ETF |
UK commercial property REITs |
~0.22% |
| SPDR Dow Jones Global Real Estate ETF |
Global REITs |
~0.40% |
| Vanguard Global ex-US Real Estate ETF |
Global ex-US REITs |
~0.12% |
| iShares Developed Markets Property Yield ETF |
Global developed market REITs |
~0.59% |
Risks
| Risk |
Detail |
| Interest rate risk |
Rising rates increase borrowing costs and make bonds more attractive vs REITs |
| Market risk |
Share prices can drop significantly in downturns |
| Sector risk |
Some sectors struggle (e.g. retail post-COVID, offices with remote work) |
| Tenant risk |
Major tenants going bust reduces income |
| Leverage risk |
Many REITs use debt — magnifies gains and losses |
| NAV discount |
You might buy at a 10–30% discount OR premium to actual property value |
| Dividend cuts |
Not guaranteed — REITs can cut dividends if income falls |
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