| Year | Property Value | Equity | Monthly Rent | Monthly Cashflow |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enter values on the Calculator tab first. | ||||
Shows monthly mortgage payment and interest coverage ratio (ICR) at each rate. Lenders typically require ICR ≥ 1.25× (rent covers 125% of mortgage). Green = passes, red = fails.
Enter values on the Calculator tab first.
Section 24 restricts personal landlords to a 20% tax credit on mortgage interest. Higher-rate taxpayers are often better off in a limited company (19% corp tax with full interest deduction). These figures are illustrative — consult a tax adviser.
| Personal (Basic 20%) | Personal (Higher 40%) | Ltd Co (19%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enter values on the Calculator tab first. | |||
Buy-to-Let FAQs
What is a good buy-to-let yield in the UK?
A gross yield of 6%+ is generally considered good for UK buy-to-let. Northern cities like Sunderland, Hull and Liverpool regularly achieve 7–10% gross. London averages 2–4%. After costs (mortgage, management, maintenance, voids), a net yield of 3–5% is typical in high-yield areas.
How does Section 24 affect buy-to-let tax?
Section 24 (introduced 2017, fully phased in from 2020) prevents private landlords from deducting mortgage interest from rental income before calculating tax. Instead you receive a 20% basic rate tax credit on the interest paid. A higher-rate (40%) taxpayer can end up paying tax on income that doesn't exist as cashflow — significantly reducing or eliminating returns. Using a limited company avoids Section 24 entirely.
What deposit do I need for a buy-to-let mortgage?
Most UK buy-to-let mortgages require a minimum 20–25% deposit. With a 25% deposit you access a wider range of rates. Lenders typically require rental income to cover 125–145% of the monthly interest payment (ICR). First-time buyers and those purchasing through limited companies may face additional criteria.
Should I buy a rental property personally or via a limited company?
Limited companies avoid Section 24 and pay 19% corporation tax on profits, which can result in significantly higher post-tax cashflow for higher-rate taxpayers. However, Ltd Co buy-to-let mortgages typically carry higher rates (+0.5–1%) and there are setup and ongoing accountancy costs (£500–£1,500/year). If you plan to hold long-term and are a 40% taxpayer, a limited company is usually more tax-efficient. Use the Section 24 tab above to compare.
Related Exit Strategy Calculators
Selling or refinancing? Plan your exit before you commit.
Free spreadsheets for BTL investors
Download our free Excel tools to model any BTL deal offline.
Prefer live analysis?
PropertyAlert.uk analyses any Rightmove or Zoopla listing instantly — yield, cashflow, SA projection and investment score. Plus get all 7 free property tools with your trial.
Start free trial — get all 7 tools →Setting up a limited company for BTL?
1st Formations makes it quick and easy to incorporate a property investment company — from £12.99.
Form Your Company with 1st Formations →