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Letting Focus

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Flat Conversion Allowance - How to Make Money from The Space Above a Shop - and Get the Taxman to help out too.

Here is some useful property tax advice.
Did you know that under the Flat Conversion Allowance scheme you can get income tax relief on the cost of converting or renovating the empty space above a shop, café, office or surgery and turning it back into use as residential flats?
However, as always with such a nice tax break, there are some rules.
In order to qualify for the allowance, the money spent has to be on things of a “capital nature” so whilst you can claim for the cost of dividing the property to create separate flats or installing a new kitchen or bathroom, you won’t be able to claim the cost of providing furnishings.
There are also rules about the type of building that qualifies.
The property that is being converted must be in a shopping street, have no more than 4 storeys and the building must have been built before 1980 with the original intention that the upper floors be used as residential accommodation.
The space above the shop or office must have been either empty or used only for storage, for at least the last year.
When the conversion is complete you must let the flats out to tenants and the ground floor must continue to be used for business purposes both during and after the conversion.
Finally, each new flat has to be self-contained and access to the street from the flats has to be separate from the ground-floor premises.
The rules say that expenditure does not qualify for he allowance if any flats created are "high value" flats, which the Revenue defines as flats which, “when the conversion or renovation work starts would be expected to achieve rents above set limits.” This is approximately £350 per week in London and £150 outside London.
You have to own the property and let it out for seven years after conversion because the allowance can be withdrawn if you sell the flats or the flats stop being used for letting during this period.
Making a claim is easy though.
You simply claim for the flat conversion allowance in the tax return for the year in which the conversion or renovation money is spent - and there are no special requirements beyond the usual self assessment.
The allowance is 100 per cent in the year in which the expenditure happens or if you prefer, you can claim a lower amount, with the balance of the cost spread over later years.
It’s possible to set the allowance against other income from property and if you don’t have enough property income in that year, the excess capital allowance can be carried forward and set off against future property profits.
Alternatively, excess capital allowances may be set against the person's other income for the year, or the following year.
I’m David Lawrenson from property investment consultancy Letting Focus. I’m the author of “Successful Property Letting – How to Make Money in Buy to Let” the UK’s top selling buy to let book and Amazon.co.uk’s top selling property title.I contribute to newspapers and a host of property websites, write a property investment blog and am a media commentator on the residential property market. You can read more of my property investment insights and details of my networking, advice, telephone consultancy and property investment seminar programme on my website www.lettingfocus.com.
What’s different about us is that we are unbiased, because unlike most people in the buy to let and property advice business we are not linked to a developer, agent or finance company. We just tell you all about buy to let and property investment - the good and the bad.

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