Feeling the squeeze on your rental profits? You’re not imagining it, and you are definitely not alone. Between frozen tax thresholds and the arrival of aggressive new digital reporting rules, the UK tax landscape has never been tougher for landlords.
If you’re wondering how to protect your margins, reduce your tax burden and regain control of your property portfolio, you’re in the right place. At GoldHouse, we help landlords and investors build long-term wealth through smart, tax-efficient strategies. As specialist accountants for landlords and property investors, that’s exactly what we’re built for. That starts with understanding the “landlord killer tax” — Section 24 — and the brand-new MTD compliance hurdles hitting this year.
What Is Section 24 and Why It Matters
Section 24 of the Finance (No.2) Act 2015 fundamentally changed the way individual landlords claim tax relief on mortgage interest. In simple terms, you can no longer deduct your finance costs (like mortgage interest) from your rental income before calculating your tax bill.
Instead, you are taxed on your gross rental income (minus non-finance expenses) and given a flat 20% basic-rate tax credit to offset it. If you are a higher-rate (40%) or additional-rate (45%) taxpayer, this restriction on mortgage interest relief structure slashes your margins or can even turn a cash-flowing property into a negative asset on paper.
How the Math Traps Higher-Rate Landlords
Because the government has frozen the higher-rate tax threshold at £50,270, rising rental prices driven by inflation are pushing standard taxpayers into the 40% bracket purely on paper, even if that extra cash went straight to the mortgage provider.
Here is how the numbers play out under the current system compared to the past:
| Tax Component | Pre-2017 System | Modern Section 24 System (2026) |
| Employment Salary | £50,270 | £50,270 |
| Gross Rental Income | £20,000 | £20,000 |
| Mortgage Interest Paid | £20,000 | £20,000 |
| HMRC Taxable Income | £50,270 (Interest fully deducted) | £70,270 (Interest ignored upfront) |
| Rental Income Tax Rate | 40% on £0 = £0 | 40% on £20,000 = £8,000 |
| Tax Credit Relief | N/A | Minus 20% of interest (-£4,000) |
| Final Rental Tax Bill | £0 | £4,000 |
Not sure how Section 24 mortgage interest relief is affecting your tax bill? Our specialist accountants for landlords can run through your numbers and identify your best route forward.
The Payment on Account Sting:
It gets worse. If your tax bill jumps unexpectedly because of Section 24 mortgage interest relief restrictions, HMRC will often demand Payments on Account — an extra 50% upfront for the following year’s estimated tax. That £4,000 bill can easily trigger an immediate £6,000 to £8,000 cash-flow hit from your bank account.
The New Hurdle: Making Tax Digital (MTD) is Live
As if Section 24 wasn’t enough, April 2026 marked the official launch of Making Tax Digital for Income Tax.
If your combined gross income from property and sole-trader businesses crosses the threshold, the traditional annual self-assessment is gone. You are now legally required to maintain digital records via HMRC-compatible software and submit five filings a year (four quarterly updates plus one final annual declaration).
The mandatory rollout follows a strict, declining schedule based on your gross turnover:
Phase 1: April 2026
- Large Portfolios – mandatory for landlords and sole traders with a qualifying gross income over £50,000.
Phase 2: April 2027
- Mid-Tier Portfolios -The threshold drops. Mandatory for those with a qualifying gross income over £30,000.
Phase 3: April 2028
- Smaller Portfolios – The net widens to include almost all active landlords. Mandatory for gross incomes over £20,000.
Mitigation Strategies: How to Fight Back
You aren’t powerless against Section 24 mortgage interest relief restrictions or MTD compliance. Proactive property investors are actively restructuring their portfolios using a few specific routes. Working with specialist buy-to-let accountants is increasingly the first step:
- **Max Out Every Allowable Expense (**Immediate Action)
Every pound you legitimately claim in operational costs (repairs, insurance, letting fees, phone bills) drops your taxable gross income. This directly protects you against both Section 24 clawbacks and hitting the MTD thresholds.
- Utilise Smart Joint Ownership (Spousal Restructuring)
If your spouse or civil partner is in a lower tax bracket, you can use a Deed of Trust to shift the beneficial ownership and rental income to their name. This utilises their basic rate band, though you must carefully assess Stamp Duty (SDLT) implications first.
- Utilise a Limited Company (SPV) (Corporate Wrappers)
Unlike individuals, limited companies (Special Purpose Vehicles) can still fully deduct 100% of mortgage interest as a business expense. Furthermore, corporate structures are currently exempt from the messy MTD for Income Tax quarterly filing rules.
- Incorporate Existing Portfolios with Expert Care (Advanced Restructuring)
Moving properties you already own into a company requires rigorous tax planning. Without proper navigation, transferring titles can trigger massive Capital Gains Tax (CGT) bills and Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT), unless you qualify for specific legal reliefs like Incorporation Relief. This is where experienced property investment accountants make a critical difference.
- Layer Advanced Wealth Structures ( SSAS & Family Investment Companies)
Sophisticated investors can link their corporate property business to a SSAS Pension to invest completely tax-free, or establish a Family Investment Company (FIC) to pass wealth down to children while mitigating future Inheritance Tax (IHT).
Don’t Panic. Get Strategic
Section 24 and Making Tax Digital do not mean the end of profitable UK property investing, but they absolutely mean the end of “set it and forget it” portfolio management.
Whether you need to transition your properties into a limited company, optimise your expenses or protect yourself against the new quarterly digital filing rules, we are here to guide you. Our property investment accountants and accountants for landlords work with portfolio holders at every stage, from first restructure to full incorporation.
Let GoldHouse turn property stress into property strategy. Book a call with our specialist property accountants today to future proof your portfolio.

