The cash basis is a simple way of preparing accounts that is based on money in and money out. It is the default basis of accounts preparation for most unincorporated landlords with annual rental income of £150,000 or less.
Under the cash basis, income is only taken into account when it is received, and relief is only given for expenses when they are paid. This methodology provides automatic relief for bad debts as if the rent is not received, it is not taken into account in calculating the rental profit.
If the rent is received at a later date or the landlord is able to recover some or all of the unpaid rent through an insurance policy, it is simply brought into account as a receipt of the property rental business on the date that it is received.
Landlords may use the accruals basis if they are not eligible for the cash basis, as may be the case if their annual rental income exceeds £150,000 or they operate their property business through a limited company. A landlord who is eligible to use the cash basis may elect to use the accruals basis instead.
Under the accruals basis, income and expenditure are matched to the period to which they relate, regardless of whether it has received or paid out. This is done by taking account of debtors, creditors, prepayments and accruals.
Where the accruals basis is used and the rent is unpaid, the rent for the period would be taken into account in calculating the profit for that period, and the balance sheet would show a debtor for the unpaid rent.
However, the tax legislation provides relief for bad and doubtful debts. Relief is given as a deduction when it becomes clear that the debt is bad or doubtful. Where a tenant is slow to pay but eventually pays, no relief is available – the rent is still taken into account for the period to which it relates regardless of when it is actually received.
02/12/2025
View all >
09/12/2025
MTD penalties waived for first year of Income Tax
Self assessment taxpayers due to join Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax next April will not face penalties if late filing quarterly updates.
READ MORE
E-invoicing will be fundamental change for VAT-registered businesses
The mandatory introduction of e-invoicing for all VAT-registered businesses selling to UK business customers from April 2029 will be a fundamental change, says the CIOT.
Sensible solution on unfair dismissal will deliver faster improvements
Reducing the qualifying period for unfair dismissal protection is a sensible move, says the Resolution Foundation.
Sign up to keep in touch to receive our latest news and industry updates.
* *
Yes, I would like to receive email updates providing me with the latest finance news, advice guides and details of future events.