Accounting for Letting Agents
A practical accounting guide for UK letting agents, covering client money accounting, AML compliance, VAT on fees, trust accounts and regulatory requirements.
Letting agents in the UK operate in a heavily regulated environment. Beyond the standard accounting requirements that apply to any business, letting agents must handle client money (tenants’ deposits and landlords’ rent), comply with anti-money laundering regulations, and navigate VAT rules that catch out many new agencies. Getting any of these wrong can result in fines, loss of your licence to trade, or worse.
Business structure
Most letting agencies operate as limited companies, though smaller operations may start as sole traders.
| Structure | Common for | Key considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Sole trader | One-person agencies, property managers | Simple setup; unlimited personal liability |
| Limited company | Most established agencies | Limited liability; Corporation Tax; more credibility with landlords |
| Partnership | Two or more agents operating together | Shared profits; each partner files Self Assessment |
| Franchise | National brand agencies (Belvoir, Martin & Co) | Franchise fee; brand support; proven systems |
Regardless of structure, you must be a member of a government-approved redress scheme (The Property Ombudsman or Property Redress Scheme) and a client money protection scheme if you hold client money.
Client money accounting
This is the most critical and distinctive aspect of letting agent accounting. Client money is money you hold on behalf of landlords and tenants – it is not your money, and it must be treated accordingly.
What counts as client money
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Rent collected from tenants | Held until paid to the landlord (minus your commission) |
| Tenancy deposits | Held until registered with a deposit protection scheme or returned |
| Maintenance funds | Contributions held for future property maintenance |
| Reserve funds | Money retained as a float for property expenses |
Separation requirements
You must hold client money in a separate designated client account that is clearly distinct from your office (business) account. The requirements are strict:
- Never mix client money with your own business funds
- The bank account must be designated as a client account and labelled accordingly
- Interest earned on the client account belongs to the clients (unless agreed otherwise)
- Maintain a client ledger showing the balance attributable to each landlord and tenant
- Reconcile the client account at least monthly – the total of individual client balances must match the bank balance
Client money protection (CMP)
Since April 2019, all letting agents in England who hold client money must belong to an approved Client Money Protection scheme. These schemes (such as RICS, ARLA Propertymark, NALS) provide compensation to landlords and tenants if the agent misappropriates client funds.
The CMP certificate must be displayed in your office and on your website.
Commission and fee income
Your business income comes from the fees and commissions you charge landlords and tenants.
Common fee structures
| Service | Typical fee |
|---|---|
| Tenant find only | 4-8% of annual rent (one-off) or 1 month’s rent |
| Full management | 8-15% of monthly rent (ongoing) |
| Tenant referencing | £15-£30 per applicant (your cost; cannot charge to tenants in England) |
| Inventory/check-in | £80-£150 per property |
| Checkout/deposit negotiation | £80-£150 per property |
| Renewal fee (if charged to landlord) | £50-£150 per renewal |
The Tenant Fees Act 2019
In England, you cannot charge tenants for most services. The only payments tenants can be required to make are:
- Rent
- Tenancy deposit (capped at 5 weeks’ rent for annual rent under £50,000)
- Holding deposit (capped at 1 week’s rent)
- Payments for early termination, changes to tenancy, loss of keys
- Default fees (only if specified in the tenancy agreement)
This means your fee income comes almost entirely from landlords. Factor this into your business model and pricing.
Recording commission income
When you collect rent on behalf of a landlord, the full rent goes into your client account. You then transfer your commission to your office account. Record:
- Gross rent received into the client account
- Commission transferred to the office account (this is your business income)
- Net rent paid to the landlord from the client account
Your turnover for accounting and tax purposes is the commission and fees you earn, not the gross rent that passes through your client account.
VAT for letting agents
Your management fees and commissions are standard-rated at 20% for VAT purposes. You must register for VAT if your taxable turnover exceeds £90,000.
What is and is not subject to VAT
| Supply | VAT treatment |
|---|---|
| Management fees to landlords | Standard-rated (20%) |
| Tenant find fees to landlords | Standard-rated (20%) |
| Inventory and checkout fees | Standard-rated (20%) |
| Rent collected on behalf of landlord | Not your supply – no VAT (agent acting as intermediary) |
| Insurance arranged for landlords | Exempt (if acting as intermediary) |
Key VAT point
Your VAT liability is calculated on your commission and fee income, not on the gross rent flowing through your client account. The rent is your client’s money; only your fees are your taxable supplies.
If you are VAT-registered, you charge VAT on your fees to the landlord. Residential landlords (who are not VAT-registered and make exempt supplies) cannot recover this VAT, so your services effectively cost them 20% more. This can be a competitive disadvantage against non-VAT-registered agents.
Anti-money laundering obligations
Letting agents are subject to the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds Regulations 2017 (as amended). This is not optional – it is a legal requirement enforced by HMRC.
Your AML duties
- Register with HMRC as a supervised business for anti-money laundering purposes
- Appoint an AML compliance officer (this can be the business owner in small agencies)
- Conduct customer due diligence (CDD) on all landlords (and tenants where applicable)
- Verify identity using documents (passport, driving licence) and proof of address
- Screen against sanctions lists
- Keep records for at least 5 years after the business relationship ends
- Report suspicious activity to the National Crime Agency (NCA) via a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR)
- Conduct a practice-wide risk assessment and review it annually
- Train staff on AML procedures
Customer due diligence – what to check
| Client type | Verification required |
|---|---|
| Individual landlord | Photo ID (passport/driving licence) + proof of address |
| Corporate landlord | Company registration, beneficial ownership, director ID |
| Overseas landlord | Enhanced due diligence – additional checks on source of funds |
| Politically Exposed Person (PEP) | Enhanced due diligence – senior management approval required |
Failure to comply with AML regulations can result in unlimited fines and criminal prosecution. HMRC conducts inspections and can impose penalties even for procedural failings.
Tenancy deposit handling
In England and Wales, you must protect tenancy deposits within 30 days of receipt using one of three government-approved schemes:
| Scheme | Type |
|---|---|
| Deposit Protection Service (DPS) | Custodial (free; scheme holds the deposit) |
| MyDeposits | Insurance-based (fee to agent; you hold the deposit) |
| Tenancy Deposit Scheme (TDS) | Both custodial and insurance options |
Accounting for deposits
- Custodial scheme – you transfer the deposit to the scheme, so it does not sit in your client account. Record the transfer and the eventual return/claim.
- Insurance scheme – you hold the deposit in your client account but pay a fee to the insurance scheme. The deposit remains on your client ledger until the tenancy ends.
In either case, the deposit is never your money. It must not be recorded as income.
Property management expenses
When managing properties on behalf of landlords, you often arrange and pay for maintenance and repairs from the client account.
Tracking property expenses
- Maintain a separate record for each property showing income received and expenses paid
- Keep invoices and receipts for all maintenance work
- Provide regular statements to landlords showing rent received, expenses deducted and net payment
- Ensure landlord approval is obtained for expenditure above any agreed threshold (typically £200-£500)
Contractor management
You will deal with numerous contractors (plumbers, electricians, locksmiths, cleaners). For accounting purposes:
- Verify whether contractors are employees or self-employed – the same IR35 principles apply
- If you pay individual contractors more than the reporting threshold, consider CIS (Construction Industry Scheme) obligations for any building work
- Keep records of all contractor payments and VAT invoices
Regulatory compliance costs
Budget for these recurring costs in your business accounts:
| Cost | Typical amount |
|---|---|
| Redress scheme membership (TPO or PRS) | £100-£750 per year |
| Client money protection scheme | £200-£500 per year |
| HMRC AML supervision fee | £300 per year (or via a professional body) |
| Professional body membership (ARLA, NALS) | £300-£1,000 per year |
| Professional indemnity insurance | £300-£1,500 per year |
| Public liability insurance | £200-£500 per year |
| Employers’ liability insurance (if you have staff) | £300-£800 per year |
| Property software (Arthur, Reapit, Alto) | £50-£200+ per month |
Key financial reports
Run these reports regularly to manage your agency effectively:
- Client account reconciliation – monthly at minimum; confirm the bank balance matches the sum of individual client balances
- Commission income report – monthly; track income by landlord and property
- Aged debtor report – which landlords have unpaid invoices?
- Property expense analysis – costs by property to identify high-maintenance buildings
- Cash flow forecast – particularly important because commission income varies with occupancy levels
Common accounting mistakes letting agents make
- Mixing client money with business funds – this is the single biggest risk; it can lead to loss of CMP membership, regulatory action and criminal charges
- Not reconciling the client account – discrepancies grow quickly if not identified monthly
- Treating gross rent as turnover – your income is your commission, not the rent flowing through your accounts
- Failing to register for AML supervision – HMRC actively checks and can impose penalties without warning
- Not completing customer due diligence – every landlord relationship requires proper AML checks
- Overlooking VAT registration – monitor your commission income against the £90,000 threshold
- Not budgeting for regulatory costs – membership fees, insurance and compliance costs add up significantly