Page 37 – Property118
Energy-efficiency graphic with coins, EPC rating chart and a government official highlighting property upgrade costs

Rachel Reeves faces £7,550 bill to upgrade EPC rating on her rental home

8th December 2025

The Chancellor Rachel Reeves is facing a £7,550 bill to improve the energy performance of her London home under Labour’s tougher EPC rules for private landlords. The Daily Telegraph reports that her four-bedroom property in Dulwich is rated D, falling short of the proposed requirement for all new tenancies to meet EPC C by 2028 […]

Four more tax tribunal wins for taxpayers

8th December 2025

Following the strong engagement with my recent article about the Sehgal SDLT decision, many readers asked a natural question: “How often do taxpayers actually win at the tax tribunals, and is the system fair?” It is easy to assume HMRC always holds the upper hand. They have deep pockets, specialist litigation teams, and the ability […]

Boiler with icons representing gas and electric options for choosing a heating system in new flats

Gas or electric boiler for flats?

8th December 2025

Hello, I’m going through the process of building 2 x 1 bed flats. I’m at the stage of the predicted/design SAP/EPC’s to add to the bundle of info to send off for Build Reg approval and what type of heating source is the question. The question is: should I go for a gas boiler or […]

Children sitting by a window with a painted rainbow, symbolising how housing tax changes may impact families.

Labour’s housing policies will push more kids into poverty

8th December 2025

Chancellor Rachel Reeves says she’s lifting half a million children out of poverty. Hang on a minute, how’s she doing that then? She’s just put an extra 2% on rental income. Where does a landlady get her rent from? Normally, a family, a woman. Oh, I see, does this woman have kids? Yes normally. If […]

Red downward trend arrow with pound symbol pointing toward a house to illustrate the financial impact of selective licensing.

Landlords win concessions on licensing fees but costs will still hit renters

8th December 2025

A landlord organisation has welcomed a council’s decision to reduce a selective licensing fee and scale back inspections, but warns the move will ultimately increase costs for tenants. The Eastern Landlords Association (ELA) had opposed Great Yarmouth Borough Council’s selective licensing scheme, which was set to cover 5,000 properties at an original cost of £784 […]

Construction worker laying mortar on a brick wall during discussion of UK build-to-rent growth

Build to rent completions rise as construction pipeline slows

8th December 2025

The build to rent sector has delivered another strong quarter, adding more than 3,700 new homes across the UK, even as construction activity shows signs of cooling. Fresh analysis from Property Inspect reveals that 139,132 BTR units had been completed by Q3 2025, a quarterly lift of 2.7% and an annual jump of 13.6%. However, […]

Cartoon of a landlord holding an insurance policy while an insurance agent rejects a claim, with a leaking house in the background.

The insurance disclosure failure that voided a claim

8th December 2025

The landlord had buildings insurance in place but failed to notify the insurer that the property was rented out. When a serious leak caused thousands of pounds of damage, they submitted a claim. The insurer investigated and discovered the property was let to tenants, something not disclosed when the policy was taken out. The claim […]

BTL Mortgage Blog featured image showing a house, key, calculator, percentage sign and pound coins on a teal background.

Case study: The landlord who expanded using buy to let gearing

8th December 2025

For landlords, growth often depends on using gearing – borrowing against equity in existing properties to fund further acquisitions. In 2025, with property values stabilising and lenders reintroducing more competitive products, gearing remains one of the most powerful tools for portfolio expansion. This case study illustrates how one landlord used refinancing and sensible leverage to […]

Dear 30-Year-Old Me: The Tightrope Between Wealth and Life

7th December 2025

You already know how to create and multiply wealth, that won’t ever be your problem. While others are chasing stable income and luxuries, you’ll already see the bigger picture: how time and debt can be transformed into equity, how every £1 million borrowed today and sensibly invested into properties with strong capital appreciation prospects becomes […]

Knight-themed Landlord Crusader logo symbolizing landlord advocacy

Tell me again why landlords should persist in a PRS rigged against them

5th December 2025

I think the kids call it doom scrolling, when you can’t stop reading negative news stories and comments on social media. In my case, the landlords on X/Twitter have had a field day after the Budget and its potential impact. I made a crack last week about getting those landlords who don’t engage with what’s […]

Digital padlock symbolising compliance and accountability in the private rented sector

Landlords must stay signed up to Ombudsman as scheme set to become mandatory

5th December 2025

The government has confirmed landlords will need to stay signed up to the Private Rented Sector Ombudsman, even after they’ve left the rental market, as it releases further guidance. However, landlord organisation says the move is “disproportionate and administratively unfair” and claims it amounts to an “exit tax for landlords.” The scheme will be mandatory […]

Halifax logo and digital houses with a graph and a person writing in the background

UK house prices stall as annual growth slows – Halifax

5th December 2025

House prices were flat in November as the market paused after several steady months of gains, the latest Halifax House Price Index reveals. The average home price now stands at £299,892, only £138 higher than October and just enough to set a new record. Yearly growth dropped back to 0.7%, down sharply from October’s 1.9%. […]

Angry landlord tearing paperwork while reacting to selective licensing concerns

Landlords blast selective licensing scheme as anger grows after first year

5th December 2025

Angry landlords have hit out at their town’s selective licensing scheme, a year after it was introduced. They accuse the council of creating higher rents, driving evictions and worsening local housing pressures, Teesside Live reports. The five-year scheme, covering central Stockton, north Thornaby and Newtown, has issued more than 1,400 licences since its launch. Landlord […]

Wooden houses and percentage markers next to a downward arrow illustrating falling rents in England.

Rents fall for fourth month as November slowdown takes hold

5th December 2025

Rents in England dropped for a fourth straight month in November as the winter lull took hold, but annual rental inflation rose from 3.1% to 3.3%. The data from Goodlord reveals that the average rent slipped by 2.4%, falling from £1,276 in October to £1,245. It marks a steady decline since July’s peak, when the […]

Food waste being placed into a green recycling bin alongside a warning sign about new waste regulations for HMO landlords

HMO landlords warned of fines under new waste regulations

5th December 2025

Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMO) landlords are being warned they could face a £5,000 fine for poor waste management under new rules. Simpler Recycling legislation, set to come into effect in March next year, will mean every household in England will be required to have a separate weekly collection of food waste, including all purpose-built […]

I think my Airbnb guests were strippers and now I have a glitter problem

5th December 2025

I have been an Airbnb host for about six years, and I thought I had seen everything. I was wrong. I recently accepted a three-night booking from three young women. They looked perfectly normal on their profile. Nothing unusual. The messages were polite, check-in was smooth, and I did not give them a second thought. […]

Cartoon of a landlord holding a mortgage agreement while a stern lender issues a repossession notice, with worried tenants watching from a window.

The mortgage consent mistake that put a landlord at risk

5th December 2025

The landlord had a standard residential mortgage but decided to let out their property when work took them abroad. They assumed the lender wouldn’t notice and went ahead without seeking consent. When the lender carried out a routine check, they discovered the property was tenanted. The landlord was in breach of their mortgage terms, exposing […]

Gavel held during legal discussion about enforcing a court judgment

Enforcing judgement against a housing association?

5th December 2025

In November 2020, I let a property in North London to a major housing association (HA) on a three-year lease. They overstayed their lease by two years and in 2025, I made a claim through the Money Claim Online arm of the County Court (MCOL) for underpayment of rent (difference between market rent and passing […]

SDLT Tribunal Win Highlights Misclassification Risks for Landlords

4th December 2025

A newly published First-tier Tribunal decision has drawn fresh attention to how easily Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) can be misapplied when property purchases include multiple components such as parking spaces, garages, or storage units. The case, Sehgal v Revenue and Customs [2025] UKFTT 1439 (TC), concerned the purchase of an apartment, an allocated car parking […]

Tenant blocking unscheduled council entry at rented home with dog presentv

Tenants will pay the price for council’s entry threats warns landlord

4th December 2025

A landlord is warning that councils gaining more powers for implementing forced intended entry to a rented property will ultimately harm tenants. While Nottingham City Council says it will not use forced entry, the Renters’ Rights Act will give council officers the power to carry out surprise inspections and enter private rented properties without a […]