Can a limited company get a buy-to-let mortgage in Yeovil?
Yes. A UK limited company, almost always a special purpose vehicle (SPV) registered under SIC code 68100 or 68209, can hold a buy-to-let mortgage on a Yeovil property in its own name. Our 100+ panel includes the specialist SPV lenders who underwrite company-held buy-to-let daily, Paragon, Kent Reliance, Fleet Mortgages, Foundation Home Loans among them. The company borrows, the directors give personal guarantees, and the rent services the loan. On the median Yeovil property at £240,000 with £1,037 per month rent, the numbers work the same way they would for any SPV case, we model them on a 15-minute call.
What is an SPV mortgage?
An SPV mortgage is a buy-to-let mortgage made to a special purpose vehicle, a limited company set up solely to hold rental property, rather than to you personally. Lenders prefer SPVs over trading companies because the company does nothing except own property, which makes the credit assessment clean: no trading risk, just the rent, the asset and the directors' guarantees. Most lenders ask for SIC code 68100 (buying and selling own real estate) or 68209 (letting of own or leased real estate) at Companies House. Rates carry a modest premium over personal-name buy-to-let, typically 0.20 to 0.40%, against which the company tax treatment usually wins for higher-rate taxpayers.
Is it worth setting up a limited company for buy-to-let in Yeovil?
It depends on your tax band and how long you intend to hold. Inside a company, mortgage interest is a fully deductible business expense and profits are taxed at corporation tax rates (19 to 25%); in your own name, Section 24 restricts mortgage interest relief to a 20% basic-rate credit, which bites hard for higher-rate taxpayers. On a Yeovil median purchase at £240,000 yielding 5.19% gross, a higher-rate taxpayer with a mortgage typically keeps meaningfully more profit inside an SPV, but you pay for it with slightly higher rates, accountancy costs and dividend tax when you extract the money. We model the comparison both ways on every case, run your own numbers with our limited company vs personal calculator.
How much deposit does an SPV need for a buy-to-let in Yeovil?
Most limited company buy-to-let lenders cap loan-to-value at 75%, with a handful going to 80% at a rate premium. On the median Yeovil property at £240,000, that means the company needs a deposit of around £60,000 (25%), or £48,000 on an 80% LTV product. The deposit usually enters the company as a director's loan, which the company can later repay to you tax-free as cash allows, lenders will want to see the provenance documented either way.
How much can a limited company borrow on a Yeovil buy-to-let?
The rent decides it. Lenders stress the rental income at a notional rate (typically 5.5%) against a 125% Interest Cover Ratio for limited companies, a structural advantage over the 145% applied to higher-rate personal borrowers, because the company pays corporation tax rather than income tax. On Yeovil's median rent of £1,037 per month, that supports a maximum loan of around £181,004 on rental cover before the 75% LTV cap, so the LTV cap binds first at £180,000. Five-year fixed products often stretch further because the lender tests at the pay rate instead of the stress rate.
Do limited companies get better mortgage rates?
No, slightly worse, and that is the wrong comparison. Limited company buy-to-let rates typically run 0.20 to 0.40% above the personal-name equivalent because the underwriting carries extra legal work (guarantees, company checks). The reason landlords still incorporate is the tax arithmetic: full mortgage interest deductibility and corporation tax rates inside the company versus Section 24's restricted relief outside it. For most higher-rate taxpayers with leverage, the tax saving comfortably outweighs the rate premium; for basic-rate taxpayers with little borrowing it often does not. We quote both structures side by side so you can see the genuine net difference on your Yeovil case.
Is Yeovil good for limited company buy-to-let?
Yeovil's 5.19% gross yield is mid-market: workable rental cover, broad lender appetite, and a balanced growth-plus-income profile. For an SPV, the 125% ICR assessment makes the cover arithmetic noticeably friendlier than personal-name at the same rent, and most of the specialist panel quotes here without hesitation.
What SIC code does a buy-to-let company need?
Lenders want to see SIC code 68100 (buying and selling of own real estate), 68209 (letting and operating of own or leased real estate), or both, registered at Companies House. 68320 (property management) is acceptable to some lenders alongside the core codes. What matters is that the company is a clean special purpose vehicle: property-only SIC codes, no trading activity, no unrelated debt. A company with mixed SIC codes or trading history pushes you into a smaller, more expensive corner of the lender panel, if that is your position, tell us early and we will route the case accordingly.
Do directors have to give personal guarantees on a limited company mortgage?
Almost always, yes. The company owns the Yeovil property and owes the debt, but lenders require directors (typically all shareholders above 20 to 25%) to personally guarantee the loan, so the limited-liability wrapper does not shield you from the mortgage itself. Guarantees are usually capped at the loan amount and most lenders require the director to take independent legal advice before signing. It is the standard cost of the structure rather than a red flag, and it is one reason lenders price SPV lending only modestly above personal-name lending.
Can I transfer my Yeovil property into a limited company?
Yes, but it is a sale, not a paperwork shuffle. The company buys the property from you at market value, which triggers capital gains tax on your disposal, stamp duty (with the 5% surcharge) on the company's purchase, and a full refinance, the existing personal mortgage is redeemed and the company takes a new limited company buy-to-let mortgage. On a median Yeovil property at £240,000 the transaction costs are real money, so the move usually makes sense as part of a long-hold, higher-rate-taxpayer strategy, sometimes with incorporation relief if you run a genuine property business. We arrange the refinance leg and work alongside your accountant on the rest.
Which lenders offer limited company buy-to-let mortgages in Yeovil?
Yeovil's 5.19% yield band attracts the full specialist SPV panel, Paragon, Kent Reliance, Fleet Mortgages, Foundation Home Loans, Landbay, alongside intermediary-only lenders such as The Mortgage Works, Leeds Building Society, Coventry Building Society that only quote through a broker. Challenger banks (Aldermore, Shawbrook, Interbay) are often sharpest on complex or portfolio company cases. Our 100+ panel covers all of them.
How much stamp duty does a limited company pay on a Yeovil buy-to-let?
Companies pay the standard SDLT bands plus the 5% surcharge on every residential purchase, there is no first-property exemption for a company the way there is for an individual first-time buyer. On the median Yeovil price of £240,000 the surcharge element alone is £12,000, on top of the standard bands. It is a real cost of the structure and we include it in every cash-requirement model, run your own numbers on our stamp duty calculator.
What is your broker fee for a limited company mortgage in Yeovil?
Initial consultations are always fee-free. We charge 1% of the loan amount, payable only on successful drawdown. The procuration fee paid by the lender (typically 0.30% to 0.55% on limited company buy-to-let) is taken first; you pay the difference up to 1% only where the lender's proc fee is below 1%. No fee at all if the case does not complete. Exact figures are confirmed in writing before you commit.
Which Yeovil postcodes are most active for company-held buy-to-let?
The most active postcode districts in Yeovil over the last 12 months are BA21 (median £225,000 from 361 transactions), BA22 (median £278,500 from 224 transactions), BA20 (median £255,000 from 137 transactions). Lender appetite for SPV cases is consistent across these districts, what moves the pricing is property type, tenancy and the company's profile, not the postcode.