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Wednesday 08 July 2015 8:16 am

July Budget 2015: Buy-to-let landlords hit as George Osborne restricts mortgage tax relief and hikes rent a room allowance

By: Emma Haslett

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George Osborne has cut mortgage interest relief on buy-to-let homes, in an effort to create a "level playing field" between prospective landlords and those buying their homes to live in.

Read more: Chancellor slashes corporation tax and bank levy

The chancellor said the relief will be cut to the basic rate of income tax, which currently stands at 20 per cent.

The measure, which will address "unfairnesses in property taxation", will be phased out "gradually" from 2017. 

Genevieve Moore, a partner at chartered accountants Blick Rothenberg, slammed the move.

"This is likely to impact many of Britain's workers who have saved hard and invested in property to supplement their retirement. [We] could see a flood of buy to lets being sold as the squeezed middle bow out of the rental market," she said.

However, in good news for Airbnb enthusiasts, though, he also raised the limit on the "rent a room" scheme, which allows landlords to earn money tax-free by letting out furnished accommodation in their home, from £4,000 to £7,500.

Read more: George Osborne announces changes to inheritance tax 

Matt Hutchison, director of flat share site SpareRoom.co.uk, said the move had "potentially huge implications" on affordable rented accommodation.

“There are an estimated 19m empty bedrooms in owner-occupied properties in England alone. Freeing up just five per cent of those rooms would accommodate almost a million people – the equivalent of a city the size of Birmingham.

“Encouraging people to take in lodgers could help them avoid repossession when interest rates rise and their mortgage repayments are adjusted. Lodger landlords can earn, on average, £8,335 per year in London, and £6,071 across the rest of the UK."

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