Buy-to-Let: Is Property Investment Worth It?

June 16, 2026
🏷️ buy-to-let 🏷️ property 🏷️ investment 🏷️ rental-income 🏷️ landlord

Buy-to-let has been one of the most popular ways to build wealth in the UK for decades. But tax changes, rising costs, and stricter lending rules have made it harder to profit. This guide covers how buy-to-let works, what it really costs, and whether it is still worth it.

How Buy-to-Let Works

A buy-to-let mortgage lets you purchase a property specifically to rent it out. You become a landlord and collect monthly rent from your tenants.

Key Requirements

Mortgage Types for Buy-to-Let

TypeHow It WorksBest For
Interest-onlyYou pay only the interest each month. The full loan is repaid at the end.Maximising monthly cash flow
RepaymentYou pay interest plus some capital each month. The loan is repaid by the end.Building equity and paying off the loan
TrackerFollows the Bank of England base rate plus a margin.Those comfortable with rate changes
Fixed rateRate stays the same for 2, 3, or 5 years.Budgeting certainty

Most buy-to-let landlords use interest-only mortgages to keep monthly costs low and maximise rental profit.

Rental Yield: What You Can Expect

Rental yield is the annual rental income as a percentage of the property value. It shows how much return you get from rent alone.

Calculating Rental Yield

Gross rental yield = (Annual rent / Property value) x 100

Example: A property worth £200,000 renting for £900 per month.

Typical Yields by Region

RegionAverage YieldExample City
North East6-8%Sunderland, Middlesbrough
North West5-7%Liverpool, Manchester
Yorkshire5-7%Leeds, Sheffield
Midlands5-6%Birmingham, Nottingham
Wales5-6%Cardiff, Swansea
South West4-5%Bristol, Exeter
South East3-4.5%Brighton, Reading
London2.5-4%Zones 3-6

Higher yields are found in cheaper areas. London has low yields but historically strong capital growth.

Gross Yield vs Net Yield

Gross yield does not account for costs. Net yield subtracts mortgage interest, management fees, maintenance, insurance, and void periods.

Example: 5.4% gross yield minus 2% mortgage interest, 12% management fee, 1% maintenance, and 5% void period = roughly 2.5-3% net yield.

Always calculate net yield — it shows your real return.

The True Cost of Buy-to-Let

The purchase price is just the start. Here are all the costs you need to factor in.

Purchase Costs

CostAmount
Deposit25-40% of property value
Stamp duty surcharge3% on top of standard rates
Legal fees£1,000-£2,000
Mortgage arrangement fee£1,000-£2,500
Survey/valuation£300-£600
Total purchase costsTypically 5-7% of property value

Example: £200,000 Property

CostAmount
Deposit (25%)£50,000
Stamp duty (3% surcharge)£6,000
Legal fees£1,500
Mortgage fee£1,500
Survey£400
Total upfront cost£59,400

Ongoing Annual Costs

CostTypical Amount
Mortgage interest2-5% of loan per year
Letting agent fees10-15% of rent
Maintenance/repairs1% of property value per year
Landlord insurance£150-£400 per year
Void periods1-2 months rent per year (5-8%)
Gas safety certificate£60-£100 per year
EICR (electrical)£150-£200 every 5 years
Accountant fees£200-£500 per year

Hidden Costs People Forget

Tax on Buy-to-Let

Tax rules for landlords have changed significantly since 2020. Here is what you need to know.

Rental Income Tax

Your rental income is added to your other income and taxed at your marginal rate:

Example: If your salary is £45,000 and you earn £10,800 rental income, your total is £55,800. You pay 40% tax on the rental income above the threshold.

Mortgage Interest Relief

You can no longer deduct mortgage interest from your rental income before calculating tax. Instead, you get a 20% tax credit on the interest you pay.

Example:

This means higher rate taxpayers pay more tax than before 2020. A 40% taxpayer now effectively gets relief at 20% instead of 40%.

Capital Gains Tax (CGT) on Sale

When you sell a buy-to-let property, you may owe CGT on the profit:

Example: Bought for £200,000, sold for £280,000. Profit: £80,000. After £3,000 allowance, CGT at 24% (higher rate) = £18,720.

Council Tax

Pros of Buy-to-Let

Leverage

You control a £200,000 asset with a £50,000 deposit. If the property grows 5% in a year, that is £10,000 gain on your £50,000 investment — a 20% return. No other mainstream investment gives you this kind of leverage.

Tangible Asset

Property is a physical asset you can see and touch. Unlike shares, it does not disappear if a company goes bust. You can improve it to increase its value.

Rental Income

Monthly rent provides a regular income stream. In retirement, this can supplement your pension.

Capital Growth

UK property has historically grown in value over the long term. While there have been crashes (2008, early 1990s), prices have generally recovered and exceeded previous peaks.

Inflation Hedge

Rents and property values tend to rise with inflation. As the cost of living increases, so does your rental income and property value.

Cons of Buy-to-Let

Illiquid

You cannot sell a property quickly. It can take months to find a buyer and complete a sale. Your money is locked up.

Management Hassle

Being a landlord means dealing with tenants, repairs, vacancies, and regulations. Even with a letting agent, it takes time and effort. A bad tenant can cost thousands.

Tax Changes

The removal of mortgage interest relief (replaced with a 20% tax credit) hit higher rate taxpayers hard. Many landlords have seen their tax bills increase significantly.

Void Periods

Properties are not always occupied. A void period of 1-2 months per year is common. During this time, you still pay the mortgage, insurance, and council tax.

Rising Costs

Maintenance, insurance, and regulatory compliance costs have all increased. Energy efficiency requirements (minimum EPC rating of C by 2028 for new tenancies) may require expensive upgrades.

Concentration Risk

Most buy-to-let landlords own just one or two properties. If that property is in an area that declines, or sits empty for months, your entire investment is affected.

Is Buy-to-Let Still Worth It?

When It Works

When It Does Not Work

Alternatives to Buy-to-Let

If you want property exposure without the hassle of being a landlord, consider these options.

REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts)

REITs are companies that own and manage portfolios of properties — offices, shops, warehouses, flats. You buy shares in the REIT and receive dividends from rental income.

UK REITs include British Land, Land Securities, and Hammerson. You can buy them through a stocks and shares ISA or a general investment account.

Property Funds

Property funds pool investor money to buy a portfolio of UK or international properties.

Property Crowdfunding

Platforms like Property Partner and Crowdestate let you invest in individual properties with other investors.

Comparison

OptionHassle LevelMinimum InvestmentLiquidityTax Efficiency
Buy-to-letHigh£50,000+LowLow (post-2020 rules)
REITsNone£50HighHigh (in ISA)
Property fundsNone£100-500MediumMedium
CrowdfundingLow£50-10,000Low-mediumVaries

Summary

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This content is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before investing.