Increasing a mortgage and claiming interest relief

Increasing a mortgage and claiming interest relief

8:13 AM, 3rd March 2017, About 7 years ago 12

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HMRC Quote;
If you increase your mortgage loan on your buy-to-let property you can also treat interest on the additional loan as a revenue expense, but only up to the capital value of the property when it was brought into your letting business.mortgage increase

HMRC Example;
You purchased a buy-to-let property for £120,000 with a mortgage of £90,000 and let it to a tenant straight away.
3 years later the property is valued at £150,000 and you increase your mortgage on the property to £115,000. All of the interest on the mortgage can still be claimed as a revenue expense as the loan doesn’t exceed the initial £120,000 value of the property when it was introduced to your letting business.

If I have no other borrowings, does this mean I can’t claim interest on the £30,000 deposit until I increase borrowings?
But what if I have a mortgage on my main residence, I could have paid £30,000 off main residence mortgage, but instead used for buy-to-let deposit. So as I now have borrowings can I claim same interest rate charged on my main residence?

Keeping it simple, lets assume Section 24 does not exist.

Michael


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Comments

18:01 PM, 4th March 2017, About 7 years ago

The capital we released by remortgaging our 2 homes on an interest only basis, when they'd both been repayment mortgages until that time, was used as deposits on 4 x BTLs (also mortgaged on an interest only basis). Three of the BTLS were financed and mortgaged on a 50/50 basis and the last one was only in my name because my home at that time had more equity in it.
I'm guessing (I can't actually recall the exact conversations the mortgage broker had with the mortgage companies) that we didn't reveal to the mortgage companies at that time why we were looking to release capital - but our bank statements from 2006/7 would reveal that neither of us had any savings (having each gone through a divorce just before we met, and having emerged from them with nothing other than our heavily mortgaged homes).
The dates of the transactions when the BTL purchases completed would confirm that was what the money we realised was used for.

Romain Garcin

18:17 PM, 4th March 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "D D" at "04/03/2017 - 18:01":

If you released equity in your homes to finance your BTL business then the interest is indeed an allowable expense.

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