Relations living rent free in second house - any issues?
Relations living rent free in second house - any issues?
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davek_964

Original Poster:

10,786 posts

199 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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I currently rent a house out via an agency. The g/f's daughter + boyfriend have decided to try living together, and we've agreed that they can move to my house early next year - rent free.

They will be responsible for household bills but will not pay any rent.

Apart from the fact that I might have to convince HMRC of this - I assume there are no other financial implications? I did an online search and didn't find anything.

Just to note - I'm not really looking for answers about whether I should charge them rent so that they gain financial awareness etc. - they already have that, and apart from the obvious loss of rent this solution works for all of us.

98elise

31,553 posts

185 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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I don't see any issues. You're not obliged to charge someone rent to live in a property.

thekingisdead

293 posts

157 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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I’d check your landlords insurance; some of them don’t let you rent to family (can make it difficult to evict)

I think you’d be ok - not technically renting and not technically family (not married / surname etc)


Percy Cushion

1,271 posts

244 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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If you have a mortgage I’d check with the lender too

davek_964

Original Poster:

10,786 posts

199 months

Monday 30th September 2024
quotequote all
thekingisdead said:
I’d check your landlords insurance; some of them don’t let you rent to family (can make it difficult to evict)

I think you’d be ok - not technically renting and not technically family (not married / surname etc)
Thanks - hadn't thought about the landlord insurance so will keep that in mind.

They will be "step family" by then.

Percy Cushion said:
If you have a mortgage I’d check with the lender too
No mortgage, so that's not an issue

Muzzer79

12,721 posts

211 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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What if you and your GF break up?

How will you get them out of your house?

If you don't want to charge rent, that's your lookout, but I would get a contract drawn up as if they were a normal tenant

davek_964

Original Poster:

10,786 posts

199 months

Monday 30th September 2024
quotequote all
Muzzer79 said:
What if you and your GF break up?

How will you get them out of your house?

If you don't want to charge rent, that's your lookout, but I would get a contract drawn up as if they were a normal tenant
We are getting married on Friday. If we "break up" - getting them out of my house would be the least of my problems.

CaiosH

1,532 posts

250 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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There could be implications on mortgage affordability if you need a mortgage for your own residence. Although if you have no mortgage on the rental property, they will probably be minimal with most lenders.


They are probably removed enough to not be considered family. I would highly recommend you have a tenancy agreement in place, even with a peppercorn rent of £1 a month. Without a tenancy agreement if there was any disagreement, no tenancy will complicate your legal options.

100% get a tenancy agreement in place!


davek_964

Original Poster:

10,786 posts

199 months

Monday 30th September 2024
quotequote all
CaiosH said:
There could be implications on mortgage affordability if you need a mortgage for your own residence. Although if you have no mortgage on the rental property, they will probably be minimal with most lenders.


They are probably removed enough to not be considered family. I would highly recommend you have a tenancy agreement in place, even with a peppercorn rent of £1 a month. Without a tenancy agreement if there was any disagreement, no tenancy will complicate your legal options.

100% get a tenancy agreement in place!
There are no issues with mortgage for our main residence.

Although I understand your point about a tenancy agreement, that brings additional complications with it. If it is "rented" - even for a nominal £1 a month - then it is equally subject to all of the rules that Labour will soon be bringing in - not least, having to be moved from EPC D to C which isn't going to happen.

Dixy

3,508 posts

229 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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Please do not do this.
No matter how much you think you are all on the same page it will go bad. One person will do something that another thinks is unacceptable and it will go down hill from there.
Many similar threads over the years.

Muzzer79

12,721 posts

211 months

Monday 30th September 2024
quotequote all
davek_964 said:
Muzzer79 said:
What if you and your GF break up?

How will you get them out of your house?

If you don't want to charge rent, that's your lookout, but I would get a contract drawn up as if they were a normal tenant
We are getting married on Friday. If we "break up" - getting them out of my house would be the least of my problems.
You're still mixing family and business which can be fraught with problems

Even if you don't break up, what if your step-daughter's BF trashes the place? What if they both don't pay their electricity/gas/council tax?

You may think it won't happen but there's been many people who have found out that it can and does.

I wouldn't do it without a tenancy agreement.

davek_964

Original Poster:

10,786 posts

199 months

Monday 30th September 2024
quotequote all
If they don't pay their council tax / electricity / gas bills, that would be between them and the business they didn't pay - regardless of whether I have a tenancy agreement.

But I will give it some thought - perhaps a tenancy agreement with zero / nominal rent makes sense. I have a few months to decide anyway.

Panamax

8,491 posts

58 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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This isn't a very cheery point but if you charge no rent you'll also be giving them a cash subsidy. That's because house prices will continue to rise with inflation and you'll eventually be charged 24% CGT on that price increase. i.e. If the value of a £100k house goes up by 10% while they're living there you'll get a £2,400 tax bill. Eventually.

Steve H

6,926 posts

219 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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davek_964 said:
But I will give it some thought - perhaps a tenancy agreement with zero / nominal rent makes sense. I have a few months to decide anyway.
This sounds like the answer, exactly what peppercorn rents were invented for.

archie456

507 posts

246 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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Panamax said:
This isn't a very cheery point but if you charge no rent you'll also be giving them a cash subsidy. That's because house prices will continue to rise with inflation and you'll eventually be charged 24% CGT on that price increase. i.e. If the value of a £100k house goes up by 10% while they're living there you'll get a £2,400 tax bill. Eventually.
If it's a second home then he'll pay CGT on any gain anyway, whether it's rented out or not.

He'll be giving them a cash subsidy simply because he's not charging them any rent.

davek_964

Original Poster:

10,786 posts

199 months

Monday 30th September 2024
quotequote all
Yes, I expect CGT to continue while they're there. That's not really an issue since it would with normal paying tenants anyway

Armitage.Shanks

2,982 posts

109 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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I've got the mother in law living rent free in a house I own. Bought it around 15yrs ago when my wife 'convinced me' it would be a good idea so they could sell theirs and use the equity to have a good standard of living. FIL passed 2yrs ago but MIL is still going strong and basically maintains the house as if it were her own so all the maintenance and modernising work I get for free.

I remember when they were selling their own house explaining what was happening their solicitor got all windy over -risk of eviction etc. so if there's a risk of a family break-up then it could be a mess.

Buildings insurance raises an eyebrow when you try to explain it. Swinton get it, they'll still charge landlord rates but going through Topcashback you can get £95 back for landlord insurance at present.

Edited by Armitage.Shanks on Monday 30th September 16:50

eyeslikealemur

47 posts

19 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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It may work out fine.

Or it may go unimaginably horrifically absurdly badly wrong, and be eye wateringly expensive to sort out legally.

There are many many ways in which the latter can happen.

So do report back regularly to let us all know how it goes.

balham123

104 posts

23 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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Think you need to speak to a lawyer.

If you create a tenancy, you create rights and responsibilities - gas certificate etc that you have to handle.

Also with all the talk about labour reforming s21 evictions, and introducing rent controls, you could find yourself stuck with a tennant living rent free in your house that you can't evict, while being responsible for it's upkeep.

If your soon to be step daughter spits with the bf, and he refuses to leave his rent free house, can you force him out?

anonymous-user

78 months

Monday 30th September 2024
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So just thinking about this. Why not keep everything in your name, and let them pay you for the bills. That way you'll know straight away when they can't pay.

They still only pay for what they use, they can even see the bills for themselves.

They would effectively be guests in your house so don't have any rights. And they can be asked to leave if anything goes pear shaped. They live "rent free" and still only pay the bills.