Who this is for: UK landlords and small developers deciding whether to buy in your own name, through a single limited company, or via a holding-company group with SPVs (Special Purpose Vehicles).

What you’ll get: plain-English explanations, how the structure actually works, the tax and lender bits people miss, and a simple checklist to sense-check before you incorporate.


Quick definitions (plain English)

SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle): a clean, dedicated limited company used only to hold or develop property. Many buy-to-let lenders prefer “clean” SPVs and will even ask for specific SIC codes (commonly 68100, 68201, 68209, 68320) when they underwrite limited-company BTL. themortgageworks.co.uk

Holding company / group: a parent company on top, with one or more SPV subsidiaries underneath (often one SPV per project or cluster). Benefits: ring-fencing of risk, cleaner exits (you can sell the shares of an SPV), and easier cash movement between companies. Costs: more admin, more paperwork, more to get wrong.

Limited company basics: you form the company with Companies House, then tell HMRC within 3 months when it becomes active for Corporation Tax. You file annual accounts and a confirmation statement every year. GOV.UK


When a holding company + SPVs makes sense

If you’ve got one lightly-geared rental and you’re a basic-rate taxpayer, the admin might outweigh the benefits. The section on “two number scenarios” below will help you feel the difference.


How to set up (short version)

  1. Decide the scope (single SPV now vs group from day one).
  2. Form the company or companies with Companies House. GOV.UK
  3. Choose lender-friendly SIC codes if borrowing via BTL lenders (e.g., 68100, 68201, 68209, 68320). themortgageworks.co.uk
  4. Register for Corporation Tax once active; open separate bank accounts. GOV.UK
  5. Paper the group properly: shareholders’ agreement, inter-company loan agreements, dividend policy, board minutes.
  6. Run it like a business: accounts, CT600, confirmation statement, inter-company records kept tidy. GOV.UK

Tax fundamentals you must model (before you incorporate)


🔎 Decision box: SPV vs personal ownership (quick comparison)

Use this to orient yourself, then jump into our spin-off for the full decision tree.

SPV (Ltd company)

Personal name

Read next: Should You Hold Property in an SPV or Your Own Name? (full pros/cons with worked examples)


✅ Pre-incorporation checklist (five-minute sanity pass)

  1. Your tax rate & leverage: if you’re higher-rate and using debt, company interest deductibility can move the needle; if you’re basic-rate and lightly geared, simplicity may win. GOV.UK
  2. Existing properties: model SDLT at market value and CGT for any transfers, and whether Incorporation Relief could apply (genuine business test). GOV.UK
  3. Lenders: confirm your SPV SIC codes match lender criteria before you incorporate. themortgageworks.co.uk
  4. Admin appetite: you’ll file accounts, CT600 and a yearly confirmation statement (there’s a fee), and keep inter-company paperwork tidy. GOV.UK
  5. VAT & property mix: residential rents are usually VAT-exempt; commercial may be exempt unless you opt to tax. Map this early if you’ll hold both. GOV.UK
  6. Director loans: avoid accidental s455 charges by agreeing a clear extraction plan (salary/dividends), not “temporary” loans. GOV.UK
  7. ATED & 17% SDLT check (high-value resi in companies): confirm if reliefs apply for a genuine property rental business and file the right return. GOV.UK

🏦 Lender mechanics (what underwriters actually look for)


Compliance & costs (written out, no table)


Two quick number scenarios (sole income, 2025/26, illustrative only)

Assumes England/Wales/NI bands: Personal Allowance £12,570, 20% basic rate to £50,270, then 40%; Section 24 gives a 20% credit on finance costs (capped by HMRC rules).

Scenario A — One rental, low leverage (basic-rate overall)

(For comparison only: if this were inside a company and profits were retained, company profit would be £13,000 and CT at 19% ≈ £2,470; extraction taxes would then apply when you pay yourself.)

Scenario B — Growing portfolio, more leverage (nudges into higher rate)

Takeaway: with sole income, Section 24 is softened by the Personal Allowance and the 20% band, so the gap to the company route narrows. The company keeps interest fully deductible (hence the clean £35k profit before CT), but remember you’ll face personal tax when you extract money (salary/dividends).


Where people go wrong (and how to avoid it)


FAQs

Is an SPV always better than owning in my own name?
No. If you’re basic-rate with little debt and want simplicity, personal ownership can be fine. SPVs tend to win for higher-rate taxpayers with leverage (company interest deductibility), and for those who value ring-fencing or share-sale exits. See our spin-off: Should You Hold Property in an SPV or Your Own Name? GOV.UK

What SIC codes do lenders accept for SPVs?
Commonly 68100, 68201, 68209, 68320, but check your chosen lender’s criteria before you incorporate.

If I move my rentals into a company, do I pay SDLT and CGT?
Often yes: SDLT can be due on market value (connected parties), and CGT may arise personally unless Incorporation Relief applies (business test, shares for consideration). Get tailored advice before you transfer. GOV.UK

Do companies pay the 3% SDLT surcharge and the 17% corporate rate?
Companies are generally within the higher additional-dwellings rates; and for residential purchases over £500,000 by certain corporate bodies, a 17% rate can apply unless a relief applies (for example, a qualifying property rental business). GOV.UK

Are residential rents subject to VAT?
Most residential lets are VAT-exempt. Commercial property can also be exempt unless you opt to tax which changes the VAT position and your input VAT recovery. GOV.UK


Next steps

Compliance note: Tax and lender rules change. Key references here include GOV.UK on Corporation Tax rates and marginal relief, Section 24 finance-cost restriction for individual landlords, SDLT market-value rules for connected companies and corporate higher rates, Incorporation Relief (TCGA s162), VAT on land and property / option to tax, Corporate Interest Restriction (de minimis £2m), s455 loans to participators, ATED, and Companies House filings and fees. Please check the latest guidance or ask us to verify for your situation. GOV.UK