Almost half of landlords plan to scale back their property portfolios or quit the market altogether in the coming years amid worries that tax changes will hit their profits, a survey suggests.
Some 46% of landlords surveyed by Axa said they were considering withdrawing from the residential market or reducing the number of properties on their books by 2020, with four in ten (41%) believing tax changes would leave them worse off.
Following an announcement in 2015, tax relief for residential landlords will gradually be restricted from this month, with buy-to-let investors no longer able to fully deduct mortgage interest payments from their tax bill.
Landlords have already been hit with a stamp duty hike imposed on people buying second homes, which came into force on April 1, 2016.
Axa said more than two-thirds (68%) of landlords feel 'stigmatised' for running a rental business, while some felt they were being used as scapegoats for the housing crisis.
A separate report from the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) has said it expects shifts in the tax regime 'to significantly reduce the number of private buy-to-let landlords in the market'.
Gordon Rutherford, head of marketing at Axa Insurance, said landlords were feeling 'increasingly apprehensive' about the residential market.
'Few landlords are professional property tycoons – two-thirds in the UK are 'accidental' landlords,' he said.
Nearly 400 private residential landlords took part in the survey.
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