Landlords face paying National Insurance on rental income
Millions of landlords could be hit by a plan to impose National Insurance contributions on rental income to generate around £2 billion in additional revenue.
Treasury sources have told The Times that the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, wants to target ‘unearned income’.
The idea is being floated to tackle a £40 billion deficit in public finances, and it is being championed by some Labour MPs.
In doing so, Ms Reeves will maintain her bid to avoid breaching pre-election commitments not to increase VAT, income tax or existing National Insurance rates.
Landlords could sell up
Critics of the plan are already lining up with Sarah Coles, the head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, saying: “The British love affair with property could be tested to destruction.
“The latest Budget rumour is that National Insurance could be payable on the profits from rental income.
“Property is already one of the least tax-efficient ways to invest, and by adding to the mountain of tax paid by landlords, it may persuade even more of them to sell up.”
She added that landlords already face an array of taxes including a stamp duty surcharge, paying income tax on profits from rental income and because the income tax thresholds have been frozen since 2021, more landlords are paying higher rates and facing bigger tax bills.
Landlords have ‘unearned income’
The Times reports sources close to the Budget preparations saying that applying National Insurance to rental income would broaden the scope of earnings subject to the levy, rather than altering its rate.
That’s a nuance likened to the recent decision to impose VAT on private school fees.
One Labour insider said: “Property income is a significant potential extra source of funds.”
They added that landlords were seen as a way of targeting ‘unearned revenue’.
Official data shows that net property income reached £27 billion in 2022-23, so an 8% National Insurance charge on this amount could yield £2.18 billion.
Smaller landlords hit
However, the structure of the levy could disproportionately impact smaller landlords.
For instance, those earning between £50,000 and £70,000, a group of 360,000 landlords generating £4.76 billion, could face an additional annual bill of £1,057 if the standard 8% rate is applied.
The existing National Insurance framework reduces to 2% for earnings above £50,000, which could exacerbate the burden on smaller property owners.
The proposal, initially floated by the Resolution Foundation last September under the leadership of Torsten Bell, who has since become a Labour MP and key figure in Ms Reeves’s budget team, was shelved but has resurfaced as a viable option.
With 2.2 million individuals reporting property income and 19% of households renting privately, according to the English Housing Survey, the policy could have far-reaching implications.
Accelerate the landlord exodus
Shaun Moore, a tax and financial planning expert at Quilter, said: “The proposal to apply National Insurance to rental income would be another significant blow to the buy to let sector, which has already been squeezed from all angles in recent years.
“Introducing an additional tax burden risks accelerating the exodus of landlords from the market, further reducing the supply of rental properties at a time when demand remains high.”
He added: “This imbalance will inevitably push rents even higher, worsening affordability for tenants and deepening the housing crisis.
“Similarly, the addition of NI would almost certainly be passed on to renters through higher rents, compounding the problem.”
Comments
Have Your Say
Every day, landlords who want to influence policy and share real-world experience add their voice here. Your perspective helps keep the debate balanced.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Previous Article
Landlords face severe consequences for unsafe housing in HarlowNext Article
Mystic Mortar Landlord Horoscope 29 Aug 2025Related Articles
8 months ago | 6 comments
8 months ago | 14 comments
Member Since September 2020 - Comments: 158
9:32 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
Lol!
Member Since August 2025 - Comments: 1
9:45 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
Unearned income, my ar$e.
Member Since January 2016 - Comments: 472
9:47 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
Tenants face paying National Insurance on landlord;s rental income.
Fixed it for ya
Member Since October 2023 - Comments: 36
9:51 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
There not a government, there not responsible, they have no ideas how to run the country. There just a group of socialist university thinking muppets drawing a great salary for being idiots.
Knock, knock there’s no one in were just squatting in parliament to annoy the hell out of the British public and landlords. It’s time for a change of government who know how to run things and we all know it’s not the Conservatives or Liebour!
Member Since March 2024 - Comments: 281
9:58 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
These clowns are flying so many kites ahead of the budget that it’s almost blotting out the late summer sun.
Face it Rachel, there’s nothing left that won’t hurt the ordinary voters – tenants, consumers of goods and services and workers whatever you do in October.
Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 73
10:00 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
More tax payable by landlords, equals more rent rises to cover those costs and a greater exodus of good landlords who just cannot face it anymore.
That is what this Gov want, the Marxist kids are running the country. We need Reform.
Member Since April 2020 - Comments: 10
10:04 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
30 Oct 2024 — The Prime Minister has stated that he does not view landlords and asset owners as “working people”, prompting backlash…. and they are now proposing to apply National Insurance to rental profits
Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 46
10:10 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
They like to treat rental income as “unearned” when it suits them. If they apply NI, would this then make it earned and so able to be placed into our pensions?
Member Since February 2017 - Comments: 57
10:14 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
Rental income has always been treated as ‘investment income’ for tax purposes with many disadvantages to this. Kier Starmer even said last year that landlords are “not hard working people” – in other words, investors not self-employed.
One example of a difference between investors and self-employed in the tax system is section 24. Self-employed can deduct their loan interest in full whereas landlords can’t.
So we are going to have a situation, unless they plan to abolish section 24 at the same time, whereby landlords are charged NI on their gross income before mortgage interest is deducted and not on the miniscule actual profits landlords with mortgage interest make. This would therefore become a humungous additional cost.
In my view this would have to be coupled with the reinstatement on loan interest being deductible LIKE ALL OTHER PAYERS OF NICs, so that the NI is at least calculated on a fair figure.
Also it needs to be addressed as to whether we are investors (no NI) or self-employed as there are many differences between the two. If they are now saying investors pay NI then will people be paying NI on their bank interest or pensions?
It’s a minefield of inconsistency I’m afraid.
Member Since April 2024 - Comments: 28
10:17 AM, 28th August 2025, About 7 months ago
National Insurance isn’t normally paid above State Pension Age…
Does that mean older Landlords will be exempt from any new taxes?