Skip to content
C

Buy-to-Let Mortgages in the UK

Buy-to-let mortgages are mainly assessed on rental cover rather than personal income. Lender criteria, fees and tax treatment differ sharply from residential — getting the structure right matters.

Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.

Quick summary

  • Most BTL mortgages are interest-only, with the loan repaid via sale or refinance.
  • Lender stress test: rental income usually needs to cover 125–145% of mortgage interest at a stressed rate (often 5.5–8%).
  • Limited company (SPV) lending has grown sharply — common for higher-rate taxpayer landlords.
  • Minimum deposit is typically 25% (75% LTV).
  • Some lenders still require a minimum personal income (often £25k).

What lenders may look at

  • Expected rental income vs stressed rate
  • Property type and EPC rating
  • Borrower experience (portfolio landlord)
  • Personal credit + income
  • SPV setup and SIC codes (if Ltd)

Documents you may need

  • Proof of rental income (existing properties)
  • Property details + valuation
  • 2 years tax returns or accounts
  • Bank statements
  • ID + deposit
  • SPV incorporation documents (if Ltd)

Common issues

  • Rental income tight against stress test — sometimes solvable with a 5-year fixed (lower stress).
  • EPC below E — affects lender appetite and reduces rentability.
  • Holiday let or HMO — needs a specialist lender.
  • Portfolio landlords (4+ properties) face extra portfolio stress tests.

Frequently asked questions

Is buy-to-let still worth it after tax changes? +
It depends — Section 24 removed mortgage interest relief for individual landlords, which is why many now use SPVs. Yield + capital growth still appeal to many.
What’s the typical rental cover ratio? +
125% for basic-rate / Ltd, 145% for higher-rate individuals, stressed at 5.5–8% depending on lender and product length.
Can a first-time landlord get a BTL mortgage? +
Yes — but the lender pool is narrower and a personal income minimum is more likely to apply.
Should I buy in a limited company? +
Often yes for higher-rate taxpayers building a portfolio. Get tax advice — there are SDLT, mortgage rate and accounting implications.
Are HMO and holiday let mortgages different? +
Yes — both need specialist lenders with different stress tests and valuation approaches.

Want help comparing real buy-to-let mortgages options?

Tell us your situation and a UK-based mortgage adviser will be in touch.

Request a callback
Free callback
UK mortgage adviser · No obligation
Get a callback