Airbnb Share Letting Data with HMRC

17/10/2020 - 6 minutes read

Airbnb has shared data with HMRC on the earnings of hosts for its platform covering 2017/18 and 2018/19 and HMRC is expected to address any issues over hosts’ payment of tax in 2021/2022.

Airbnb Share Letting Data with HMRC

Landlords need to realise that HMRC will know about their lettings through Airbnb, so full disclosure of all their taxable property income is essential, including for all prior years.

This should not come as a surprise to tax advisers, as HMRC has been using its Connect data analysis system for years to scrape data concerning property income and gains from various sources. However, it is a jolt to see the relationship between the online platform and HMRC stated so bluntly.

Opening Enquiries

The Airbnb data will allow HMRC to launch targeted enquiries into the tax affairs of individuals who have not declared their lettings income for 2017/18 and 2018/19. The deadline for opening an enquiry into a self-assessment return for 2018/19 is 31 January 2021, if the return was issued and submitted on time.

However, the discovery rules allow HMRC to go back much further, up to 20 years in some cases. The data provided by Airbnb will certainly constitute a discovery for HMRC’s purposes, so up to 20 years will be open for enquiry.

HMRC is reported as saying it will address any issues over the landlords’ payment of tax in 2021/22. This clearly indicates that HMRC expects to use its discovery powers to open up tax enquiries going back some years.

Guidance

All online platforms providers in the gig economy have come under pressure from tax authorities around the world to ensure that their customers pay tax on their earnings.

To help nudge their hosts in the right direction Airbnb provides a short note written by PwC on tax considerations for short term lettings on its website. This was last updated in January 2019, so it could do with a refurbishment. 

The guidance note doesn’t advise landlords how to declare income from property in past tax years, or what to do in the case of a tax enquiry, neither does it mention capital gains tax.

An earlier 49-page guidance note produced for Airbnb by EY in 2018 is far more comprehensive as it includes sections on income as well as gains, and a very useful chapter on how to complete a self-assessment tax return.

There is also a shortlist of points taxpayers may make get wrong, such as not registering for self-assessment when they need to.     

Annual Earnings – What to Declare

The Airbnb insight report for 2017/18 says the annual earnings from Airbnb by a typical UK host is £3,100, (£3,800 in Scotland). This lies within the room-a-room relief allowance of £7,500, so would not generate a tax reporting obligation for a host who only lets out part of their main home.

However, letting a second or third home that generates income in excess of £1,000 in a tax year will create a tax reporting obligation. The £1,000 limit is the trading and miscellaneous income annual allowance that can apply to letting income that doesn’t fall within rent-a-room relief.  

How to Declare your Rental Income

If the landlord hasn’t declared their rental income, and it is not covered by rent-a-room relief or the miscellaneous trading income allowance, this situation should be swiftly corrected.

Where the taxpayer has submitted a tax return, and it is still in date for amendment, it should be amended without delay. The 2018/19 tax return can be amended by the taxpayer until 31 January 2021.

Where the omitted property income or gain relates to earlier tax years, the taxpayer should consider disclosing under HMRC’s let property campaign.

This disclosure service has been running for over seven years, but it is only open to individuals who let UK residential property. It can’t be used to declare income from non-residential property or where the property has been let through a company or trust.

Where the let property is located overseas the worldwide disclosure facility should be used.

The advantage in using the let property campaign to disclose is that the penalties charged for non-disclosure will be much lower than if the taxpayer waits for HMRC to contact them.

If full disclosure and payment of the tax are made before HMRC spots there is a problem, the penalty can be reduced to nil.

Contact MCL Accountants on 01702 593 029 to optimise your tax position or if you need any assistance with your company accounts or self-assessment tax returns including landlord tax returns.

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