Confusion about Stamp Duty
We are in the process of downsizing, selling our principle residence and buying a smaller one . We will have to sell before we buy so there is no question of us owning two houses at the same time .
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Luxury Retirement Home Investment in Cornwall
Located in a county with one of the highest percentage of over 65s. This luxury retirement home investment in St Austell attracts self-paying residents which are shown to be the most profitable.
A 10% net rental income is guaranteed for ten years with a buy back option in year 10 for 125%.
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Stamp duty could be ‘carrot and stick’ for energy efficiency says climate minister
Claire Perry, the Energy Minister, has said Stamp Duty could be used as the ‘carrot and stick’ in order to meet targets on climate change laws and cut fuel bills and increase energy efficiency for households reducing carbon emissions.
Stamp Duty rates could be used as incentives or punishment depending on the efficiency of the home.
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Meet the woman showing gender is not a pre-requisite in the construction industry
Education is key to showing the construction industry is no longer regarded as a ‘man’s job’ – according to a female associate director at Birmingham’s Building Services Design (BSD).
Jo Jones has been promoted to associate director at the mechanical and engineering (M&E) company – the first woman in the business to take on the senior role.
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79% of BTL purchases now in Ltd company names post Section 24
Mortgages for Business Quarter 3 figures show that post Section 24 mortgage interest relief restrictions for individual purchasers that 79% of Buy to Let purchases by value are now in the name of a Limited Company.
This is up from 73% of purchases in Quarter 2 of this year.
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Splitting a Commercial Property to Sell
We own a commercial property (2 properties side by side) which is currently split for lease between 3 tenants as follows:
2 downstairs shops/units leased as food outlets (tenants 1 & 2)
1 HMO – all of the upstairs with 9 studios (tenant 3)
Tenant 3 (HMO) would like to buy the upstairs.
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Rogue Landlords Make A Killing from Benefit Tenants, or do they?
Housing Benefit:
David Lawrenson writes in his LettingFocus.com blog about rogue landlords and how they no longer target the “rent capped” housing benefit tenants, but instead now go for the untraceable immigrant market.
David writes, “I’m a regular subscriber to a newsletter written by Ben Reeve Lewis,” whose job is working as a Tenancy Relations Officer for a local authority.
“Ben really understands the realities of the private rented sector far more than the top local and government politicians do. Like many people at the coalface he will tell you that myriad laws imposed on private landlords will not do a thing without enough enforcement bodies on the ground to go after the rogue landlords who blight our profession, whilst causing misery to their tenant-victims,” writes Mr Lawrenson.
The rogues just ignore all the rules and do their best to stay under the radar. In the absence of enough enforcement at local government level, most continue to get away with it for years, probably forever!
Rogue Landlords making a Killing
In a recent blog post, says David, Ben highlighted a piece form a national newspaper that said some £2.5 billion in housing benefit (HB) goes out every year to landlords running properties in what they term a “non-decent” condition by which they mean properties with inadequate heating, outdated sanitation and serious disrepair such as vermin, dodgy boilers and faulty wiring
Ben remarks how this article piqued his interest. He says, “Given my day job, I’m interested in this. I go into these properties every day but in actual fact, in London, you find that 90% of the crappiest properties aren’t occupied by people on HB at all but by foreign nationals paying cash, usually with no receipts given.”
He remarks that he first noticed rogue landlords swapping over to this market 4 or 5 years back when they evidently realised that benefit claimants meant “people inside the system”, which in turn means documentation and traceability, not to mention people entitled to claim homelessness and approach the council for advice who then could potentially turn into “Witnesses for the Prosecution”.
Ben goes on to say in his blog:
“In the worst areas, the worst properties are occupied by people paying rent to the worst types of landlords and the worst kinds of agents, all too eager to exploit vulnerable people desperately cramming themselves into rooms in order to be able to afford the rents out of their meagre earnings garnered through either cash in hand work (often with the same landlords) and zero hours contracts cleaning hotels for £4 an hour.
“In London, this is the real bad end of the rogue landlord market as people, like Dick Whittington, still think the streets are paved with gold. I suppose if you are a criminal landlord with a ready supply of migrant workers desperate to just get by – they are.”
Right to Rent
“Our daft government and the top civil servants at County Hall might like to think that the ‘Right to Rent’ controls would deal with this,” says Mr Lawrenson
“But, of course, it won’t, because, as Ben says”:
“The criminals playing the system who don’t give a flying fox about those laws either. They are not ‘ordinary’ landlords who obey the rules! This is organized crime, including people trafficking, not poor Mrs. Moggs from Cheltenham who accidentally let to a turbaned man from Lahore, because she’d once taken a weekend break in La Rochelle and understandably thought they were both in France.”
“Meanwhile, you dear landlord-reader, given that you are reading this, will no doubt be complying with all the laws. You will still be struggling to deal with the multi-pronged tax assaults unleashed on our business by George Osborne.”
“And right now, if you have more than four mortgaged and let properties you may be reading about how the government in the shape of the PRA (part of the Bank of England) has just made it even harder for landlords like you to get finance or even to refinance your existing mortgage loans. The fact that it has got harder for you to get financing or to turn a profit will be part and parcel of the cost of having to comply with all the rules and regulations (many of them overlapping) that now govern our business.
“But the criminal landlord will not have your cost base to worry about because he will not be meeting any regulations. His often illegal tenants will hardly dare complain for fear of being deported by the Border Control people. The chances of him ever being found out are very low because there are so few officers like Ben at the town halls – the councils are hopelessly overstretched. For the criminal landlord, life goes on very happily indeed.
“And meanwhile, you dear good landlord, you will be castigated by the likes of some in the press for supposedly ripping off benefit tenants.
“Yes, it’s a mad world in which the government plays continually to the press gallery, who themselves fail to understand what is actually going on in the real world of the private rented sector.”
David Lawrenson writes his regular blog here: www.lettingfocus.com
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Rogue Landlords Make A Killing from Benefit Tenants, or do they? | LandlordZONE.
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