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Property/DIY

Do tenants pay service charge?

18 replies

ElleDubloo · 07/06/2015 20:14

Just that, really. We're doing buy-to-let on our flat, for the first time. Service charge is £130 a month. Can we give the tenant a £130 discount on the rent and ask them to pay the service charge directly? Just because it'll save us paying income tax (40%) and agent fees (13%) on that amount.

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Mrsmorton · 07/06/2015 20:17

That's what I was led to believe when I started letting a property. As long as they actually pay it...

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Mrsmorton · 07/06/2015 20:18

But for you its tax deductable so why the income tax? Ive probably missed something

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bookishandblondish · 07/06/2015 20:19

I've never paid service charge - it's always been included within the overall rent ( three rentals properties).

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wowfudge · 07/06/2015 20:20

What about you continuing to pay the service charge direct to the managing agent or management company and not involving the tenant at all? With what you are suggesting, what happens if you give the tenant the discount and they don't actually pay the service charge?

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PennyJennyPie · 07/06/2015 20:26

You pay the service charge. Not sure how you think about tax, this is a cost so deductible against revenue. Can you clarify the agent cost?

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eurochick · 07/06/2015 20:27

In my experience, the landlord pays.

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felkov · 07/06/2015 20:27

You'll need to check that the management company will permit someone other than the legal owner to pay.

when we did BTL on a leasehold flat the management co made us continue to pay ground rent and service charges.

As a PP said they are both tax deductible expenses (as are the agents fees) so that shouldn't make any difference to you

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tribpot · 07/06/2015 20:28

Yes, we pay the service charge on our flat, not the tenants. I wouldn't expect them to pay it.

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littleblackno · 07/06/2015 20:33

I pay it on my btl. it covers building insurance which as far as I understood was landlord responsibility. If tenant doesn't pay for whatever reason then you won't be covered, I wouldn't want to take that risk.

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AugustRose · 07/06/2015 20:38

I've never been asked to pay a service charge as a tenant.

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ConnortheMonkey · 07/06/2015 20:41

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Rubyrooo · 07/06/2015 20:49

The landlord usually pays it. As well as being tax deductible, the risk is that if the landlord has passed the cost on direct to the tenant and the tenant defaults, the Man co can forfeit the landlord's long leasehold interest.

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EhricLovesTheBhrothers · 07/06/2015 21:00

Never been asked to pay it, I would find it a weird annoyance and imposition if I was asked to pay two separate payments instead of one as my rent.

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PettsWoodParadise · 07/06/2015 21:33

It's important you pay it and not the tenant as failure to pay could mean forfeiture and you've got no paper trail to prove it was paid. Other things you need to be clear on is deposits and providing the right information as otherwise that can land you in a lot of hot water. It is perfectly easy to manage your own rental properties or group of properties even if working full time but you need to do a lot of reading up. I've been doing it for five years and we've learnt lessons, not usually expensive ones, but they could have been!

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ElleDubloo · 08/06/2015 09:46

OK, that's good to know. I didn't realise that service charge is tax deductible too. Thanks everyone! :)

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specialsubject · 08/06/2015 11:33

why is your agent taking their 13% on this? That percentage is only chargeable on the rent.

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Mrsmorton · 08/06/2015 12:39

Because the tenants are paying the rent so the agent charges a % on it. Op as the landlord then pays the tax deductible service charge out of the rent.

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PettsWoodParadise · 08/06/2015 18:19

We pay an accountant about £120 a year to do our accounts. We provide the figures and he does the rest including submitting to HMRC. We saved a fortune compared to what HMRC calculated we owed them so well worth it. You only get tax relief on the interest of any mortgage not the full amount if a repayment. you can also claim mileage for visits to and from the property etc.

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