Tax
Airbnb Income Tax UK — How to Declare and What You Can Claim
A guide to tax on Airbnb and short-let income in the UK — when to declare, Rent a Room relief, the property allowance, allowable expenses, and business rates.
Hosting on Airbnb or similar short-let platforms is increasingly popular — but many hosts don’t realise they may owe tax. Here’s how it works.
Quick Decision — Is Your Airbnb Income Taxable?
| Scenario |
Tax position |
| Renting a room in your own home, income under £7,500/year |
Tax-free (Rent a Room scheme) |
| Renting a room in your own home, income over £7,500/year |
Tax on income above £7,500 (or calculate actual expenses) |
| Renting a whole separate property, income under £1,000/year |
Tax-free (property allowance) |
| Renting a whole separate property, income over £1,000/year |
Tax on profit (income minus expenses) |
| Renting your own home while on holiday, income under £1,000 |
Tax-free (property allowance — Rent a Room doesn’t apply when you’re not in residence) |
| Renting your own home while on holiday, income over £1,000 |
Tax on profit (income minus expenses or minus £1,000 allowance) |
Rent a Room Scheme — £7,500 Tax-Free
| Detail |
Information |
| Tax-free threshold |
£7,500 per year (£3,750 if sharing the income with a partner) |
| What qualifies |
Letting a furnished room in your main home |
| Includes |
Airbnb income, lodgers, bed and breakfast |
| Platform |
Doesn’t matter — Airbnb, Booking.com, SpareRoom, private |
| Furnished? |
Must be furnished |
| Your main home? |
Must be the home you live in |
| Whole property let |
Does not qualify — you must be living there at the same time |
Rent a Room — How It Works
| Income level |
What you do |
| Under £7,500 |
Nothing — no need to declare to HMRC |
| Over £7,500 (use flat-rate method) |
Declare income on Self Assessment, deduct £7,500, pay tax on the rest |
| Over £7,500 (use actual expenses method) |
Declare income, deduct actual expenses, pay tax on the profit |
Example: Rent a Room
| Detail |
Amount |
| Airbnb income from spare room (per year) |
£9,000 |
| Option 1: Flat-rate method |
£9,000 − £7,500 = £1,500 taxable |
| Option 2: Actual expenses (cleaning £1,000, laundry £200, platform fee £900) |
£9,000 − £2,100 = £6,900 taxable |
| Best option |
Flat-rate — £1,500 taxable |
If your expenses are more than £7,500, choose actual expenses instead.
Property Allowance — £1,000 Tax-Free
| Detail |
Information |
| Tax-free threshold |
£1,000 per year |
| What qualifies |
Any property income that doesn’t use Rent a Room |
| Includes |
Whole property lets, holiday lets, land |
| Can use alongside Rent a Room? |
Yes — but on different income streams (e.g. Rent a Room for your spare room, property allowance for a separate flat) |
Example: Separate Property on Airbnb
| Detail |
Amount |
| Annual Airbnb income |
£8,000 |
| Option 1: Property allowance |
£8,000 − £1,000 = £7,000 taxable |
| Option 2: Actual expenses (see table below) |
£8,000 − £4,500 = £3,500 taxable |
| Best option |
Actual expenses — £3,500 taxable |
Allowable Expenses for Airbnb
| Expense |
Deductible? |
Notes |
| Airbnb service fee (host fee) |
Yes |
Typically 3% of booking |
| Cleaning costs |
Yes |
Professional cleaning between guests |
| Laundry (towels, bedding) |
Yes |
Laundrette or cleaning service |
| Toiletries and supplies |
Yes |
Soap, toilet paper, coffee, milk |
| Utilities (proportional) |
Yes |
Gas, electricity, water — for the period/space let |
| Internet (proportional) |
Yes |
If guests use your WiFi |
| Insurance (short-let cover) |
Yes |
Specialist Airbnb or short-let insurance |
| Repairs and maintenance |
Yes |
Fixing things that break |
| Replacement furnishings |
Yes |
Like-for-like replacement of furniture, towels, etc. |
| Council tax (proportional) |
Possibly |
If you pay extra or are reclassified to business rates |
| Mortgage interest |
20% tax credit |
Same rules as buy-to-let — not a direct deduction |
| Photography |
Yes |
Professional listing photos |
| Advertising beyond Airbnb |
Yes |
Other listing sites, social media promotion |
| Key safe / smart lock |
Yes |
Guest access equipment |
| TV licence (if separate property) |
Yes |
If the property needs its own licence |
Tax Rates on Airbnb Income
Your Airbnb profit is added to your other income and taxed at your marginal rate:
| Tax band |
Rate |
| Personal Allowance (£0–£12,570) |
0% |
| Basic rate (£12,571–£50,270) |
20% |
| Higher rate (£50,271–£125,140) |
40% |
| Additional rate (over £125,140) |
45% |
Example: Employed Host
| Detail |
Amount |
| Employment income |
£35,000 |
| Airbnb profit (after expenses) |
£5,000 |
| Total taxable income |
£40,000 |
| Tax on Airbnb profit |
£5,000 × 20% = £1,000 |
| Plus Class 2/4 NI? |
No — rental income is not subject to NI |
Does HMRC Know About My Airbnb Income?
| How HMRC finds out |
Detail |
| Platform reporting |
From January 2024, digital platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com, etc.) are required to report UK hosts’ income to HMRC under DAC7 |
| Data matching |
HMRC cross-references platform data with tax returns |
| Land Registry |
HMRC can check property ownership records |
| Self-reporting |
You are legally required to declare rental income |
| Penalties for non-disclosure |
Up to 100% of the tax owed, plus interest |
HMRC now receives your income data directly from Airbnb. If you haven’t been declaring, consider making a voluntary disclosure.
Furnished Holiday Lettings (Important Change)
| Detail |
Information |
| Old rules (before April 2025) |
Furnished Holiday Lettings (FHL) had special tax advantages — mortgage interest fully deductible, capital allowances, pension-relevant earnings |
| From April 2025 |
FHL tax regime abolished — holiday lets now taxed the same as standard buy-to-lets |
| Impact |
Mortgage interest now 20% credit only, no capital allowances on furniture, not pension-relevant |
| Who it affects |
Owners of dedicated holiday let properties |
Business Rates vs Council Tax
| Detail |
Information |
| Council Tax |
Applies to residential properties |
| Business rates |
May apply if the property is available to let for 140+ days per year and actually let for 70+ days |
| Small business rates relief |
You may qualify for 100% relief if rateable value is under £12,000 |
| Why it matters |
Business rates can be £0 (with relief) whereas Council Tax could be £1,000–£3,000 |
| Risk |
Reclassification is not automatic — check with your local council and the Valuation Office Agency |
Record Keeping
| Record |
Keep for |
| All booking confirmations and income |
5 years after 31 January following the tax year |
| All expense receipts |
5 years after 31 January |
| Platform income statements |
5 years after 31 January |
| Mortgage statements |
5 years after 31 January |
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