buy to let mortgage
sen asked:


I am planning to buy a buy to let property. I am raising money from my residential home to put deposit of 25 percent. I am aware that i can claim tax for the interest on buy to let mortgage. What i want to know is whether i can claim tax on the interest I will be paying for the deposit money as well.
For example, £100,000 property. 25,000 raised from my current home. Say i pay £200 interest towards that.
75000 mortgage for the buy to let property. 500 interest. Rent is £750.

a. If i can claim tax for both the interests, then my tax liability is only£30 (750-(500+220)). (For this calculation i have ignored other tax benefits).
b. interest on deposit is not tax claimable and my tax liability is £250 (750-500).

Which scenario is correct.
Many thanks for your help

Sen

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3 Comment(s)

  1. B is correct. You only get tax relief on the money you pay to the mortgage lender.

    Assuming you are in the UK

    dunrobin46 | Jun 21, 2009 | Reply

  2. I think that you are proposing a risky course of action Sen. If you borrow against the equity in your current home to fund the deposit on a buy to let purchase you will, in effect, be buying on a 100% mortgage. If the housing market plummets – and dont think it cannot happen, about 15 or so years ago the house prices dropped by around 40% in 3 years! (a house i rented out instead of selling would have sold for 76k, 3 years later when i sold it the best i could get was 46k !!!)
    you could end up with a substantial negative equity situation. Plus none of us have a Crystal Ball – you may be a high earner today, a year from now you could be a non-earner with your own home at risk.
    Not going to happen you say – well, 12 years back my salary level dropped by 50% in 4 months when i lost around 60% of my hearing in both ears after a short illness and was no longer able to do my previous job!

    COLIN T | Jun 22, 2009 | Reply

  3. As long as you can show that all funds went towards the purchase of the property, then all interest paid will be tax deductible.

    Onestep downfrom God | Jun 26, 2009 | Reply

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