Mortgages  

Tax considerations for BTL investors

This article is part of
Guide to the buy-to-let market

Lenders use a calculation that includes an interest cover ratio, which is generally somewhere between 125 per cent to 170 per cent depending on the lender’s criteria, the borrower’s tax rate or application type (house of multiple occupancy or company). 

Then the lender will apply a stress rate when assessing the loan amount on BTL applications. 

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This will provide a figure that the lender will consider to be the minimum property rental income to cover that mortgage loan. 

Noye explains further that when assessing BTL mortgages on five-year fixed rate products or longer, many lenders stress the loan using the product rate as opposed to a standard stress rate.

This means landlords can often borrow more on longer-term products in comparison to shorter-term products, for example two or three years.

Different calculations may also be used when the application is for a product transfer or a like-for-like remortgage that requires no additional borrowing.

Ima Jackson-Obot is deputy features editor at FTAdviser