Sophrosyne
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Do you think it's Case I (i.e. some form of hotel-keeping trade)?
If someone has a five bedroom house, with four bedrooms pretty much constantly let out through Airbnb and it's their principal activity, perhaps.
But looking at the Badges of Trade (e.g. Motive, etc), it is difficult to see how one could argue that a homeowner who uses Airbnb to let out a spare room in his/her home could be deemed to be carrying on a trade. That has passive rental income written all over it in my view, especially if the owner has another entirely unrelated job.
If I have a spare room in my house, and I let it out for 6 months to a student or I let it out for 6 days to a seconded worker, what is the difference? Section 216A makes no reference to duration.
Looking at the badges of trade, I don't see how you can argue it out of Case I, but there you go, doctors differ..!
If I have a spare room in my house, and I let it out for 6 months to a student or I let it out for 6 days to a seconded worker, what is the difference? Section 216A makes no reference to duration.
But that's completely different. The student is living there. The seconded worker is staying there for a temporary period of 6 days, he could just as likely be in a B&B, an hotel, a guesthouse.
Don't think mortgage interest should be allowed as the house wasn't bought with the intention of generating rent (not wholly and exclusively).
But the legislation does not have any conditions regarding duration of stay. I would contend that renting a room in someone's home for 3 days, 3 weeks, or 3 months are the same for the purposes of the legislation.
I agree that the legislation does not have conditions regarding duration.
But there is a difference between getting a tenant for 12 months and a series of people who stay for 1-7 nights.
It's not clear at all which is demonstrated by the differing views on here but if you have say 10 different people staying in your house over a period of time it's looking like a trade! Not withstanding the fact that it was not the motive of the house owner when they bought the house.
In those circumstances, from a Section 216A perspective, one tenant for 12 months or 52 tenants for one week each should be treated exactly the same.
In my view 52 guests using your guest accommodation is a trade and therefore section 216A does not apply!
How should the original intention on acquisition be relevant? Either the cost applies to the taxable activity or it doesn't. End of.
End of? Absolutely not 'End of', with respect. The test for deduction is wholly and exclusively, like any other trade and taxable activity. If the house was purchased wholly and exclusively for renting out then sure interest is a deduction (wrong to be restricted to 75% but that's life!).
However, if the house was bought for residential use by the owner and they decide to use one of the rooms for renting out then it fails the test.
(As an aside, if mortgage interest started to be allowed under these scenarios there would be 'havoc', creative schemes of all types, simply with the intention of getting a deduction. Think we have had enough of these schemes on property.)
Pretty straightforward re the intention at the start - did the owner live in the house that they purchased or was it registered as a buy to let? The intention is most certainly relevant.
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