Replacement details
How Replacement of Domestic Items Relief works
Since April 2016, UK landlords letting unfurnished or partly-furnished residential property can claim the cost of replacing domestic items as a deduction from rental income. This replaced the older "10% wear and tear allowance" that applied to fully-furnished lets only.
Items that qualify include: movable furniture (sofas, beds, tables), furnishings (curtains, rugs, linen), household appliances (fridges, washing machines, microwaves), kitchenware (crockery, cutlery). The first-time provision of any of these is not deductible — only replacements.
The "like-for-like" rule
You can only claim the cost of a "modern equivalent" of the item being replaced — not the cost of an upgrade. If you replace a £350 basic washing machine with a £500 premium model, only £350 is deductible (the like-for-like figure); the remaining £150 is treated as a non-allowable improvement.
The exception: where the original item is no longer made and the modern equivalent has the same function but is necessarily more advanced (e.g. you can't buy a non-Energy-Star fridge any more), the modern equivalent IS the like-for-like cost. HMRC's tests of "function" not "spec" are the operative ones.
The disposal proceeds offset
If you sell the old item — even for £20 on Gumtree — those proceeds reduce the deductible amount. Most landlords just dump or recycle the old item, in which case proceeds are zero and the full like-for-like cost is deductible.
What is NOT covered by RDIR
- Fixtures — boilers, integrated kitchen units, fitted bathrooms. These are part of the building structure and follow normal repair-vs-improvement rules. A like-for-like boiler replacement is a deductible repair; replacing a working boiler with a more efficient one to gain capacity is partly an improvement and is restricted similarly.
- The first time you furnish a property. Initial furnishing costs are capital and feed into CGT base cost, not rental deductions.
- Furniture for furnished holiday lets. FHL has different rules — capital allowances under the Annual Investment Allowance regime apply.
- Items used personally. Mixed-use items (e.g. a property you sometimes live in) need apportionment.
Worked example
Replacing a £350 basic washing machine with a £500 premium model, sold the old one for £20, higher-rate taxpayer:
- Like-for-like cost: £350
- Less disposal proceeds: £20
- Deductible: £330
- Non-allowable improvement: £150 (cost of new − like-for-like)
- Tax saved at 40%: £132
- Net cost: £500 (paid) − £20 (disposal) − £132 (tax saving) = £348
Common landlord mistakes
- Treating the first carpet as deductible. First-time carpets in an unfurnished let are capital, not deductible. Only replacements are.
- Claiming improvements as repairs. A new bathroom suite for a working old one is mostly improvement, not repair. The "like-for-like" doctrine still applies.
- Forgetting to keep receipts and old-item evidence. HMRC may ask for proof that an item being replaced existed — keep the old item's purchase records or photos.
- Mixing up RDIR with mortgage interest restriction. Mortgage interest is now a 20% tax credit, not a deduction. RDIR is still a full deduction from rental income.
Related calculators
Buy-to-let calculator · CGT property calculator · Stamp Duty (second home) calculator · Sole trader tax calculator if running properties as a business.
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