0:01 AM, 1st December 2025, About A week ago
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Many landlords in 2025 are considering moving their portfolios from personal ownership into limited companies. The drivers are varied: restructuring for succession planning, creating refinancing flexibility, or managing long-term liabilities. While incorporation can deliver commercial benefits, the mortgage implications are significant. Lenders treat company structures differently, and planning ahead is essential to avoid being caught out mid-transition.
Incorporation changes both the borrower and the way affordability is assessed. Instead of lending to you personally, the lender is now lending to a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) company. This has implications for underwriting, product availability and long-term refinancing options. For many landlords, moving into a company unlocks more borrowing capacity thanks to lower stress test requirements, but it also comes with additional responsibilities.
When you borrow through a limited company, lenders typically require:
In practice, the lender looks at both the company and the individuals behind it.
A major reason landlords incorporate is the more favourable stress testing. While personal borrowers are usually tested at 145% coverage, limited company borrowers often qualify at 125% coverage. This makes refinancing possible for properties that would otherwise fail affordability tests in personal names.
Example:
That 20% difference can decide whether an application passes or fails.
Moving properties into a company structure involves more than just changing the borrower name:
Scenario: A landlord with 10 properties in personal names struggled to refinance two low-yield flats under the 145% rule. They decided to incorporate and refinance the entire portfolio under an SPV.
Solution: The broker sequenced refinancing, starting with the strongest-yielding properties to establish affordability. The new SPV mortgages were tested at 125% coverage, allowing the weaker flats to be refinanced later.
Outcome: Although product rates were 0.4% higher on average, the landlord avoided being trapped on reversion rates and created a more flexible structure for future succession planning.
Incorporation opens new doors for landlords, especially when affordability is tight under personal borrowing rules. But it is not a step to take lightly. Success depends on careful sequencing, specialist advice and choosing lenders who understand company structures. When done well, it can provide both borrowing flexibility and long-term stability.
Our sponsor works daily with landlords moving from personal to limited company structures. They know which lenders support SPVs, how to sequence refinances, and how to balance higher costs against long-term benefits.
Publication date: Monday, 1 December 2025
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