5 days ago | 29 comments
Landlords could be required to pay tax every month under Treasury proposals that would calculate deductions using income declared in the previous year, the Daily Telegraph reports.
The move comes after the controversial Making Tax Digital (MTD) is already forcing thousands of property owners into a new quarterly reporting regime.
The government is consulting on plans that could allow HMRC to collect tax before some landlords and self-employed workers have received the income needed to pay it.
Monthly deductions would be based on the taxpayer’s previous annual return, with the resulting forecast liability divided into 12 payments.
Someone whose last return showed earnings of £30,000 could, for example, face deductions of £290 a month.
The system would apply to people earning above a threshold that has not yet been decided.
Labour plans to introduce the monthly payment regime from April 2030.
For landlords, the proposal could create problems where income changes sharply between tax years or varies during the year.
Voids, repairs, mortgage costs and late rent payments can all affect a landlord’s cashflow in any month.
Zena Hanks, of accountancy firm Saffery, told the Telegraph: “For the self-employed, this is going to cause huge disruption to cashflow.
“The principles are sound, ensuring tax is paid closer to income being received, but you can’t predict future income easily.”
Self-employed taxpayers currently make payments on account twice a year, normally in January and July, based on their previous tax return.
Ms Hanks added: “It’s all very well HMRC issuing refunds, but taxpayers could have to pay more tax at a time when their business is under pressure.”
The proposal follows the introduction of Making Tax Digital for Income Tax in April.
Eligible landlords and self-employed workers must now use HMRC-approved software and submit financial information four times a year.
The regime currently applies where qualifying income exceeds £50,000.
The threshold will fall to £30,000 next year and £20,000 from 2028.
However, while quarterly submissions do not replace the annual tax return process, they do add another layer of record-keeping for landlords.
Making Tax Digital was delayed four times and ran £1bn over budget.
Its rollout has also prompted concern about whether HMRC could manage another major change to the way tax is reported and collected.
An HMRC spokesman told the newspaper: “Spreading tax payments more evenly through the year could help taxpayers avoid unexpected lump-sum bills and reduce the risk of falling into tax debt.
“We recognise that self-employed people and landlords can have fluctuating incomes, which is why we are consulting widely as we want to hear views on how potential reforms could work in practice.”
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5 days ago | 29 comments
1 month ago | 10 comments
Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1031
9:56 AM, 15th July 2026, About 2 hours ago
This will not raise any more revenue, just change when HMRC receives it. So it improves the Governments cashflow marginally (in the grand scheme of all other tax receipts), but hits small landlords hard with the double whammy of poorer cashflow and extra admin.
Member Since December 2021 - Comments: 21
9:57 AM, 15th July 2026, About 2 hours ago
But we already pay tax in advance… so cashflow wise it’s not massively different from what we do now – i.e. move from 2 large payments a year to 12 smaller payments…
Member Since January 2015 - Comments: 1526 - Articles: 1
10:02 AM, 15th July 2026, About 2 hours ago
All part of Labour’s strategy to make income from property and self employment PAYE – thus also requiring NIC.
But does the landlord also become their own employer so not only requiring employees NIC but additional employers NIC?
Member Since November 2022 - Comments: 8
10:08 AM, 15th July 2026, About 2 hours ago
We’ve got to get rid of this government.
Member Since July 2013 - Comments: 16
10:26 AM, 15th July 2026, About 1 hour ago
The only positive I can see from this is that the more the government taxes Landlords like a business the more the argument prevails that landlords ARE a proper business, as we well know. And maybe there will be a challenge that cannot be denied to reinstate mortgage interest relief, in the same way that all other businesses can claim their expenses.
I know I’m a hopeless deluded optimist.
Member Since October 2023 - Comments: 45
10:38 AM, 15th July 2026, About 1 hour ago
You can see how desperate this government is now becoming to get cash into the coffers more quickly, it’s either that or just another policy to wipe out private landlords for good. The trouble is they would only waste and squander this monthly tax money once they received it. The only beneficiaries who would come out on top is Welfare Benefits street. If the Labour government was a private landlord it would have gone bust a long time ago.
Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1633
10:39 AM, 15th July 2026, About 1 hour ago
The government has issued so many additional costs and risks that landlords have started to sell. This gives Labour significant CGT receipts that they are squandering.
It also reduce tax revenue from the PRS. Recognising this loss of income, Reeves added 2% to tax on rental income.
Now they want it monthly. Next, they’ll want it a year in advance. Eventually, they’ll want it all paid upfront as soon as a landlords buys a rental property. One day, they’ll need to tax unborn children to fund their incompetence.
My aim is to pay as little tax as possible if I consider taxes are unfair. I consider taxes to be unfair.
Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 1261
11:27 AM, 15th July 2026, About 13 minutes ago
If its solely based on the previous year’s earnings, the problem for landlords will be if they suddenly get a void or a non-paying tenant.