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Introduction -renting as a contractor
As a limited company contractor or consultant, you may be contracting away from home occasionally, or, on a regular basis. What’s more, working away could be a requirement of your current UK contracting ongoing arrangements. Indeed, you may be working away from family for several days or for the whole working week. Therefore, you may plan on renting a house or flat on contract while you’re there. While renting a property on contract, this could be a choice of renting a flat or house that’s near your current worksite. Depending on the length of your engagement, when renting as a contractor, you may need to rent away from home for a certain length of time.
When you’re working away from home during the week and renting as a contractor, can you claim the rental accommodation costs and other workaway costs as a business expense? Basically, as part of your work and conducting business away from home, you may make business trips from time to time. What’s more, some work locations could be quite a distance from where you live. Alternatively, you may have a contract that involves travelling a fair distance and staying there for most of the working week.
When you’re working away as part of a business trip, you may need to stay there overnight. Indeed, when you are a contractor staying away from home overnight, the obvious choice is a hotel or B&B. However, if you will be working there for a number of months, leasing a house or flat may work out less costly. Consequently, searching for longer term accommodation for contractors will be less expensive. In this guide, we’ll look at what costs are involved in renting a house or flat and what is tax-deductible in respect of the contractor property you rent out.
Initial thoughts -renting as a contractor
Common questions and considerations
Many independent contractors who work away (UK) from home will have common questions about what they can claim. Others who are perhaps considering far from home rental will also have questions around what are genuine business expenses. Therefore, examples of such questions include:
- Can I rent an apartment with a contract job?
- Can I rent a house with a temporary job?
- Can I rent a house through my company?
- Can a limited company rent a house?
- Can a limited company rent a residential property?
- Can I deduct rent if I work away from home?
- Are travel and transportation expenses related to rental property deductible?
As a result, UK contractors looking for accommodation and away from home rentals have several choices. Indeed, if you intend to rent far from home, there are various types of worksite accommodations available. Therefore, for those that are looking to do this they may consider the following:
- Who near their workplace is renting house to contractors.
- Where offers rentals for contractors and contract workers accommodation.
- Who may be renting rooms to contractors.
- Where else in their work area offers contractor rentals.
- Are there any private houses / flats in the area that they work. If there are, will allow them a contract for renting a house or flat, perhaps on a short-term basis.
Besides contractor rentals when you rent away from home, we have a separate guide that covers relocation costs. This covers the rules when you are moving to a new primary place of residence during your contracting career. If you are thinking about contracting abroad, there are also certain things to consider.
Performing work away from home
As a UK contractor, you may sometimes need to travel for your contract work. As part of this, you will incur travel expenses. Depending on your work, the journey could be quite a commute on some occasions. If this is so, it may prove to be more practical to stay away overnight and find some working accommodation near your work location. Therefore, you’ll need to be near your worksite in a hotel or stay away rentals while you work away from home.
It could be the case that you’re away full time during the week. Therefore, a journey there and back each day may prove to be too much in terms of time. This could be so, especially given how busy the motorways can get during the working week. Therefore, you may prefer to stay closer to your worksite until the working week comes to a close.
It could also be the case that you perform a week’s work in a location that is too far to travel back each day. Therefore, you’ll look to stay over in some form of accommodation. As a result, you may even consider renting a house for a week if there’s one available.
Let’s now consider renting property on contract and if you can claim the cost of renting a house or flat near your contract site. You might consider paying rent and take a look at rental property contracts while UK contracting. This could be especially so if you have a fixed term of work for, say, six months or more. Alternatively, if you’re working month to month and not guaranteed to be at the work location for a fixed period, staying in a hotel or B&B would be the better option as opposed to renting a house or flat on contract.
Claim for temporary accommodation
Travelling distances
When you are working away, the distance may be too far to be travelling there and back each day. Therefore, you can claim your working away-from-home accommodation costs. Besides hotel or B&B expenses, you could also claim for renting a property while you work away. When renting as a contractor, you can also claim the utility costs for your contractor house or flat. Furthermore, when you rent away from home, you can also claim for the food costs, such as eating out or eating at the property where you are staying.
When you are renting as a contractor and claim for the property rental, utility bills and food, these are tax-deductible. Therefore, when you are a contractor renting away from home, your business will save Corporation Tax on these costs. The claims will, however, be dependent on you meeting specific tests.
Based on the type of work that you do, you may also be able to claim your business clothing. However, there are also specific rules here on what you can claim.
Different choices of contractor rentals when you work away
When you are working away, you may have family and friends who live there. If this is the case, you could stay with them. This assumes that your family member or friend is happy to put you up for a few days.
However, the above may not be an option. In this case, you will need to investigate an alternative in terms of working away from home accommodation such as:
- A hotel.
- B&B.
- Renting a property from a house renting company (e.g., estate agent) or individual.
- Specialist contractor property rentals -you can find firms that specialise in this area on the internet.
With the last two above you will be renting property on contract. Therefore, as a UK contractor limited company you could consider renting away from home and stay here while you are at your contract site during the week. Furthermore, let’s investigate renting as a contractor and what to think about with regards to renting a house for business purposes. We can find out when you are renting away from home while UK contracting, if your costs while staying away are allowable expenses.
What to consider when you work away from home
The first areas to look at
Some factors should be taken into account when you consider if you can claim for your temporary work accommodation as an expense:
- First, when you are renting a property as a UK contractor, the place where you are staying in must not be your permanent place of residence. If a contractor lives in the property, they cannot claim this i.e., it should be a temporary residence that they only stay in while they are working at the worksite.
- Secondly, when renting a house or flat on contract you must continue to have your primary residence whilst claiming temporary work accommodation.
- The worksite and property that you stay in and pay rent for should not be close to your permanent residence.
If you meet the above criteria while renting property on contract, you can claim the cost of a contractor rental property near your new work site.
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) could potentially challenge the rent away from home claim. If they did this, you must show that staying in temporary digs near your work site is more financially beneficial.
Compare the costs
Your company may, at some point, undergo an HMRC enquiry. As part of this, you would need to try and show that the temporary accommodation expenses are necessary. You could, therefore, compare the renting away from home costs and utility bills against the mileage cost to get you to and from the work site. In addition, if you drive to the temporary worksite, you can claim business mileage expenses under HMRC’s approved rates.
The available rates for business mileage expenses when using your own vehicle to get to your work site are:
- 45 pence per mile for the first 10,000 miles travelled in the tax year.
- 25 pence for each mile after that.
On the other hand, you could compare the monthly property rent contract costs against the cost of monthly rail costs to get you to the site. The total property rental and utility expenses should come to less than the mileage or rail costs. If it does, you would be able to demonstrate that this is more financially beneficial.
It is also important to show that there is no personal benefit when you are renting property on contract. By this, we mean no personal benefit derived from renting the property while you are on contract. Therefore, if we ask how many days can you use a rental property for personal use, the answer is none. As a result, you may be asked by HMRC to demonstrate that you rent temporary accommodation purely for work reasons.
Furthermore, when renting the flat or house for business, you would not be able to have friends or family staying there. If you did, personal usage/benefit would require reporting on form P11D.
Renting as a contractor for work reasons
House rent contracts
What should we consider in respect of house rent contracts? Indeed, what should we think about in terms of how does renting a house work for a contractor who is renting a house or flat on contract?
- First, before you obtain a contract for rent for a property, you should ensure it is fit for human habitation.
- Second, you should ensure that the landlord has paid for gas safety checks. This is required by law on the landlord’s part.
- Third, you must get the written tenancy agreement for the contractor rental property in your company’s name to claim the cost through your business. Basically, the type of tenancy agreement will set out the terms of the lease. An assured shorthold tenancy is the most common tenancy agreement if you rent from a private landlord or letting agent.
The written agreement
When you’re staying in a house away from home for work reasons and renting as a contractor, the written agreement is a contract between the landlord and the tenant, setting out the terms of the tenancy. In this case, the tenant is your UK contracting company. The agreement for the contractor rental property will set out all of the terms and conditions. Therefore, the contract of rent agreement should contain:
- Details of the parties involved.
- The rental price.
- Any deposit to be retained by the landlord.
- The address of the property.
- The start and end date of the tenancy.
- The obligations of both the tenant and landlord.
Both parties must be fully aware of what is included in the tenancy before signing an agreement. Usually, there will be a notice period of 30 days. However, you may be able to give notice at any time. That is unless there is a break clause or the tenancy agreement says otherwise.
Therefore, if you are renting a home and claiming the contractor property rent as an expense, the rental agreement must be with your company rather than you personally. Tenancy deposits are also usually required upfront for lease agreements. Furthermore, deposits are repayable in full after the term of any agreements. Indeed, this is assuming there are no damages to the property.
Other considerations
Renting as a contractor -the deposit protection scheme and your utility bills
When you sign a contract to rent a house or flat, you may be required to pay a month or week’s rent in advance, as part of a deposit for the house or flat. In the UK, there is now in place a deposit protection scheme. Therefore, when renting a property as a UK contractor, under this tenancy deposit scheme the landlord must keep your deposit in a separate bank account. Additionally, under deposit protection schemes, the deposit will be refundable to you in the future when you eventually leave the contractor rental property.
With regards to the associated utility costs, you should try and get these bills in your company’s name. Doing this will demonstrate that the costs are for your company rather than you.
It would also be advisable to ensure that your will company (rather than you personally) will pay:
- Rent to the landlord.
- Council tax to the local authority.
- Energy bills to utility companies.
- The cost of contents insurance.
Therefore, you could set the rent and utility payments on your company’s bank account rather than your personal account.
If you can demonstrate and do all of the above, this will help back up your claim that these are legitimate business expenses via your company.
Claim for travel and food costs when you work away
If you can justify a rental property as a business expense, you can also claim for the travel and transportation expenses related to the rental property in terms of travelling back and forth to this. In addition, in terms of food, you can claim your meals as subsistence expenses while you work away. This is as long as these are not `excessive.’
There are also HMRC standard meal allowances that are available. However, during your time away, you might usually eat at your rented property; if you do, you can claim your shopping bills.
As part of claiming your shopping bills, you should ensure that you do not include personal items on your receipts from the local supermarket. Therefore, it is important to be careful here; otherwise, you will need to separate out personal items when making claims for shopping bills through your company.
There is also a difference in how business meals and meals for entertainment are treated for tax purposes. In addition, all of your travelling type costs are subject to you not falling foul of the two-year rule.
Furthermore, when you stay away from home overnight for work reasons, you can also claim Personal Incidental Expenses (PIEs). These are allowable expenses when you stay away overnight.
Final thoughts
Many limited company contractors in all industries will stay away from home overnight for work reasons during the week. Basically, many will opt for a hotel or B&B type accommodation however some will choose a contractor rental property.
Therefore, many contracting professionals who travel a fair distance will prefer to rent away from home in either a temporary house or flat, or stay in a hotel, rather than commuting back and forth to work. When you compare the cost to staying in a property overnight, the latter can cost much more.
If you follow the guidelines above, you can claim the temporary accommodation costs as travel expenses through your UK company. In turn, the cost of renting a house or flat on contract will be tax-deductible expenses for your business. Therefore, when you are renting as a contractor, your company will save Corporation Tax (CT) at 19% or 25% against its annual CT bill, depending on whether your company is small or large (see our Corporation Tax guide for details).
Finally, when you can claim temporary accommodation costs through your contractor company, your business will pick up the cost. To sum up, this is better than picking this up personally from your already taxed personal income.
Link to Contractor Advice UK group on
Very Informative
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