1 week ago | 3 comments
Landlords already dealing with Renters’ Rights Act compliance deadlines are now facing another tax proposal being resurrected.
The Daily Telegraph reports that the New Economics Foundation is calling for National Insurance Contributions to be extended to landlords’ rent income.
The left-leaning think tank says the current exemption is ‘unwarranted’.
It told the Telegraph that the measure could raise £3.2bn and bring landlords’ contributions closer to those paid by wage earners.
George Bangham, the head of social policy at NEF, told the newspaper: “We all expect to pay National Insurance on our wages, in order to contribute to vital services like the NHS.
“But when landlords make money from rental income, they are not asked to contribute the same as everyone else.
“This is clearly unfair: income from renting out a property should be treated the same as income from work.”
The proposal would change the sums behind many buy to let investments if adopted, particularly for landlords already working through higher borrowing costs, tax changes and the new RRA regime.
NEF has suggested pairing the move with a mortgage interest deduction, so landlords would be taxed on profit rather than revenue.
Property118 reported last year that a similar idea had been floated as part of a wider effort to raise around £2bn from landlords.
At the time, Treasury sources told The Times that the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, wanted to target ‘unearned income’.
But she also wanted to avoid breaches of pre-election pledges not to increase VAT, income tax or existing National Insurance rates.
Landlord groups have warned that further tax rises would hit tenants as well as investors.
The National Residential Landlords Association says an NI levy would be ‘disastrous’ for landlords and tenants.
It also warns that extra costs could be passed on through higher rents.
Paul Shamplina, of Landlord Action, told the Telegraph that the move could speed up landlords leaving the PRS.
Both Mr Shamplina and the NRLA have pointed to the cumulative impact of tax changes, including a recent 2% income tax surcharge on rent income, as a pressure on margins and future investment.
The tax proposal has returned while landlords face several Renters’ Rights Act deadlines.
The final court deadline for pre-Act Section 21 and Section 8 eviction notices is 31 July 2026.
The Private Rented Sector database is due to begin its regional rollout later in the year, with registration set to become mandatory by 2027.
Compulsory membership of the new Landlord Ombudsman is expected by the end of 2028.
Landlords who miss the requirements could face fines of up to £40,000, adding another compliance risk alongside any future tax change.
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1 week ago | 3 comments
3 months ago | 10 comments
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Member Since August 2023 - Comments: 8
9:01 AM, 8th June 2026, About 2 days ago
Reply to the comment left by Ryan Stevens at 07/06/2026 – 21:51
What are you going on about, I am retired, still self employed, have an accountant, also a professional landlord. Why should I pay more NI, after 54 years work, I believe I tick all the boxes, do you live in one
Member Since January 2024 - Comments: 379
12:41 PM, 8th June 2026, About 2 days ago
Reply to the comment left by GH at https://www.property118.com/landlords-face-renewed-national-insurance-tax-proposal/comment-page-2/#comment-205932“
; rel=”ugc”>07:59
With respect, I do, I’m a tax consultant. You now say you are still self-employed, so that would be the source on which you pay NIC, not rental profits.
If you think about it, why would the think tank be suggesting NIC on rental profits if there is already NIC on rental profits?
Member Since August 2023 - Comments: 8
6:15 PM, 9th June 2026, About 15 hours ago
HM Treasury is considering applying National Insurance Contributions (NICs) to rental properties. Think tanks closely tied to the Labour Party, such as the New Economics Foundation, are heavily lobbying for the move to treat rental income the same as employment income, a policy that could raise over £3.2 billion annually.
Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 444
7:43 PM, 9th June 2026, About 13 hours ago
Reply to the comment left by Perc666 music at 09/06/2026 – 18:15
Any more taxes and fines by this government may mean profits for many landlords will be negative. What then!
Member Since August 2023 - Comments: 8
8:44 PM, 9th June 2026, About 12 hours ago
True, but the Poloticians are not getting any housing stock up to scratch by fining landlords & pushing expenses to landlords on the epc front, electrics, gas, the list is endless.