At the Property Investor and Homebuyers show at the London
ExCel last weekend, it was a great opportunity to talk to professional
landlords, as well as those looking to take their first steps onto the Buy to
Let sector ladder.
With many changes and increases in taxation on profits being
recently introduced along with licence requirements for houses of multiple
occupation, minimum size requirements on rooms, and minimum standards for
energy efficiency, etc, the Buy to Let sector has taken quite a beating!
One of the main specialist lenders in this area, Kent
Reliance, recently issued their Buy to Let Britain Report, edition nine, which
looks at Buy to Let trends and the sectors confidence.
The report suggests that Brexit uncertainty and Government
intervention has subdued the growth of the Private Rental Sector. However, rents are rising at their fastest
annual rate since 2017, climbing by 1.3% to £896 pcm.
Despite landlord confidence falling to it’s second-lowest level, rents are outpacing house prices with average yields rising to a two-year high (4.5%). Yields in London are at their highest since 2015!
The report continues stating that remortgaging activity
accounts for three quarters of mortgage lending in Buy to Let as landlords look
to lower costs and fix mortgage rates.
Whilst 72% of all Buy to Let mortgage applications for purchasing a
property are now made in a limited company name.
Since the Prudential Regulation Authority stress test rules
came into effect in 2017, lenders have to work out affordability on a Buy to
Let mortgage based on the rental income achievable from the property and stress
the product term over a five year period, often at 145% of a nominal rate of
5.5%. Lenders interpret the rules
differently and differentiate between a Buy to Let in a personal name compared
to a property brought in a limited company name.
So, if this is an area you are looking at moving in to, seek
advice (and especially tax advice) as buying in a limited company name and over
a five-year fixed rate, could allow you to achieve a mortgage loan
substantially higher than against in your personal name and a based on two year
mortgage deal. Terms always apply and
read the small print!
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