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Room Rental

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My wife and I are renting out a room and want to limit our tax liability. We own the house jointly, and as my wife doesn't work, I wondered if all the income from the letting was in my wife's name we could avoid any tax liability?

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  • DreamerV
    DreamerV Posts: 823 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Combo Breaker
    You can rent out a spare room in your house under the rent a room scheme for up to £4250 tax free (including everything, bills, council tax etc. as far as I understand it). I'm guessing you bring in more than this?
  • noh
    noh Posts: 5,817 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    Splodger64 wrote: »
    My wife and I are renting out a room and want to limit our tax liability. We own the house jointly, and as my wife doesn't work, I wondered if all the income from the letting was in my wife's name we could avoid any tax liability?

    You probably have very little if any tax liability anyway. how much rent do you receive annually?
    £4250 p.a. is tax free under the rent a room scheme.

    http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/individuals/tmarent-a-room-scheme.shtml
  • diable
    diable Posts: 5,258 Forumite
    Don't tell anyone.
  • 00ec25
    00ec25 Posts: 9,123 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    the correct answer as CLEARLY stated on HMRC is that a jointly owned property means the RAR allowance is split 2125/2125 each

    so you each can receive 2125 tax free. If the share is greater than that per person that you owe tax on the EXCESS over 2125 each
    http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/pimmanual/pim4001.htm

    by all means do not declare it. After all what the UK needs is more tax dodgers and benefit scroungers
  • Thanks for the replies, but do I have to do it through the HMRC Rent a Room scheme? Surely it can be run as an unrelated enterprise, entirely by my wife, with her taking all the income. And if that doesn't take her into the income levels for which tax is paid, then it is all legitimate, surely?
  • jimmo
    jimmo Posts: 2,287 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    No, you don’t have to use rent a room if you don’t want to.

    No you cannot simply regard your wife as being entitled to the whole of the rental income. See Jointly owned property - husband & wife or civil partners towards the lower end of this link.

    http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/pimmanual/PIM1030.htm

    However, if she was running a b&b the answer would be different.
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