Rachel Reeves R4 this am told the interviewer that Labour (when in power) would raise money by taxing those with BTL property much more than at present, she opined it was wrong that “they” were “getting away with it”. No challenge from BBC or fact check as to present tax. You are warned.
Labour taxation plans
Collapse
X
-
The overriding issue is that Covid & Brex**it has to be paid for. And taxes will being going up. Regardless of who is in power, as certain as night follows day.
I am legally unqualified: If you need to rely on advice check it with a suitable authority - eg a solicitor specialising in landlord/tenant law...
Comment
-
I do wonder where those in England who can’t or won’t buy will be able to live as more and more private landlords exit the market. Scotland and Wales have both scrapped RTB whilst England expanded RTB to HA properties as well as council and not enough new social housing is being build to replace the housing that was flogged off with great big discounts.
Comment
-
Originally posted by SouthernDave View PostJust dont sell… problem solved
Having a BTL you cannot ...... Let ! Is akin to having a fridge full of food you cannot eat.
Comment
-
The EPC enforcement is bonkers, another government plan thought up by hippies, it wont work. They dod something similar in 2016 when they said they needed to cut the cost of UK construction. Some bright spark decided the way to do it would be to make all government funded construction projects have to be undertaken in a BIM system. Laughable.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Hudson01 View Post
Oh if only it was that simple....... when you have properties with an EPC of E and the target from 2028 is looking very likely to be a C....... selling is the only real option given what it would cost me to get them to a C (if it was even possible).
Having a BTL you cannot ...... Let ! Is akin to having a fridge full of food you cannot eat.
Comment
-
Originally posted by steaming View PostRachel Reeves R4 this am told the interviewer that Labour (when in power) would raise money by taxing those with BTL property much more than at present, she opined it was wrong that “they” were “getting away with it”. No challenge from BBC or fact check as to present tax. You are warned.
She was specifically talking about the 1.5% NI levy for the NHS, which is applied to income from wages but not rent or other investments.
The labour party have previously said that this is unfair, because it taxes working people more highly than people with other forms of income.
Nurses pay the 1.5% levy and investment bankers don't.
When I post, I am expressing an opinion - feel free to disagree, I have been wrong before.
Please don't act on my suggestions without checking with a grown-up (ideally some kind of expert).
Comment
Latest Activity
Collapse
-
by jpkeatesI think some of this is based on some odd assumptions.
Yes, a landlord (like a tenant) can decline to use ADR and, if there's no resolution to a dispute, the tenant would need to sue their landlord.
The courts don't seem to be more strict or impartial than ADR and the loser...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 08:01 AM -
-
by FairAppleCorrect me if I'm wrong, but it seems that allowing arbitration through the ADR requires consent from both the tenant and the landlord. Obviously the tenants are likely to prefer this when they do not agree to a given deduction.
But what prevents a landlord from making a deduction right...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 07:53 AM -
-
Reply to Trying to evict son from my propertyby jpkeatesHow can anyone think he's a permitted occupier?
That makes no sense.
He's either a family member making a contribution to the upkeep of somewhere or a tenant who should pay rent.
If you treat them as the latter, you're unlikely to go wrong.
You should ask for the...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 07:53 AM -
-
by deleterenewThis is a very messy situation. My son lived with my mother, and when she died (2016) I inherited her house. My son carried on living there and did not pay anything or make any contributions to the rent. During 2020 my circumstances changed and I needed him to pay to live there. He did pay some money...
-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
30-06-2022, 09:45 AM -
-
Reply to Trying to evict son from my propertyby deleterenewI looked at these previously but they seem to specialise in standard cases, that can be easily won in court. Everyone I've contacted is unsure whether he's a tenant or an permitted occupier. I have a key and until last year when this started I stayed with him when I visited the north east,...
-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 07:37 AM -
-
Reply to Trying to evict son from my propertyby deleterenewThanks I'll try this, yesterday she said my only option was apply to set aside the judgement....
-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 07:35 AM -
-
Reply to Trying to evict son from my propertyby deleterenewvery sad
1. Yes
2. none of this, served a S21 and S8
3. No, I've paid for all repairs.
Very sad situation...
-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 07:34 AM -
-
Reply to Trying to evict son from my propertyby deleterenewIt was dismissed...
-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 07:32 AM -
-
by bombataIt was Corona, and the Estate Agents did not seem to have a problem with that but in retrospect I should have put her on the AST....
-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 06:30 AM -
-
by bombataHi,
I have been renting a house to a couple for the past two years. Only the husband is on the tenancy agreement as the sole tenant. His wife just lived with him and does not work.
They decided to divorce- and it's messy they are not speaking to one another. The husband moved out...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
30-06-2022, 19:26 PM -
Comment