Last reviewed: 3 June 2026

Quick summary

  • Landlords do not always need an accountant, but the case becomes stronger with multiple properties, unclear expenses, finance costs, joint ownership, MTD or deadline pressure.
  • Check the tax year, income source, records and threshold before relying on a broad rule.
  • Use the preparation checklist on this page before speaking to an accountant.

Direct answer

Landlords do not always need an accountant, but the case becomes stronger with multiple properties, unclear expenses, finance costs, joint ownership, MTD or deadline pressure.

What this means in practice

  • Simple rental records may be manageable yourself.
  • Repairs versus improvements is a common area to check.
  • MTD makes record quality more important.

The best next step is usually to gather the facts before asking for advice: income, expenses, dates, software, previous returns and any HMRC letters. That gives an accountant something concrete to review.

What to prepare before speaking to an accountant

  • Number of properties and ownership shares.
  • Rent received and agent statements.
  • Mortgage and finance cost information.
  • Repair and improvement invoices.
  • MTD and Self Assessment deadline position.

Examples of how the answer can change

A landlord with one property, clear rent records and straightforward expenses may be able to prepare figures with careful record keeping.

An accountant becomes more useful for multiple properties, joint ownership, finance costs, repairs versus improvements, property sales, MTD or non-resident landlord issues.

The useful pattern is to separate facts from judgement. Facts are things like dates, turnover, software, invoices, bank statements, ownership and deadlines. Judgement is where a rule has to be applied to those facts. The more judgement involved, the more valuable a focused accountant conversation becomes.

Common real-world questions this guide answers

  • Is one property simple enough to do myself? It can be, but only if rent, agent fees, repairs, mortgage interest and ownership are clear enough to support the return.
  • What if my letting agent deducts fees before paying me? Keep the full agent statement. The net bank receipt is not the whole rental record.
  • Which costs usually need a second look? Repairs versus improvements, finance costs, replacement domestic items, legal fees, property sale costs and mixed personal use are common accountant questions.
  • When does MTD change the answer? If qualifying property income may bring you into MTD, record quality and software workflow become more important than the annual return alone.

How to use this guide before you speak to anyone

Prepare rent statements, tenancy dates, agent fees, repair invoices, insurance, service charges and mortgage interest information.

Then write down the decision you are trying to make in one sentence. For example, you might be trying to decide whether to file yourself, change software, register for VAT, switch accountant or clean up records before a deadline. A clear question helps an accountant respond more usefully and helps you compare answers from different providers.

Do not treat the first call as only a price check. Use it to test whether the accountant understands the situation, can explain the next step in plain English and can tell you what information they need before giving a firm view.

How to compare your options

It usually helps to compare three routes: doing it yourself, using software or bookkeeping support, and speaking to an accountant. The right route depends on the risk of getting it wrong, how much time you have, whether deadlines are close and whether the answer affects future tax or compliance.

DIY can be sensible when records are tidy, the rules are easy to check and the financial impact is modest. Software can help when the main issue is organisation, recurring transactions or digital records. Accountant support becomes more useful when interpretation, judgement, deadlines or business structure are involved.

When comparing accountants, ask for the scope in writing. A good comparison should tell you what is included, what is excluded, who will do the work, how quickly they respond, what records they need and whether they understand your business type.

A quick quality check before you decide

  • Can you explain the issue in one sentence
  • Do you have evidence for the figures or records involved
  • Have you checked the official guidance linked on this page
  • Would a mistake create penalties, extra tax, missed deadlines or messy records next year
  • Do you know what you want an accountant to answer

If several of those answers are unclear, the next step is not necessarily a long engagement. It may simply be a short accountant conversation to confirm the right route and avoid building the rest of the year on a weak assumption.

What this guide is focusing on

Use this guide if you are a landlord trying to turn rent, agent statements, repairs and ownership details into records an accountant can actually use. For Do landlords need an accountant, focus on how the rule meets the records, thresholds, software and decisions you actually have in front of you.

What figure, record or decision should you pin down?

Pin down rent by property, ownership share, agent deductions, repairs versus improvements, finance costs, deposits and whether MTD changes the record process. That gives an accountant something specific to check and stops the conversation becoming a vague discussion about tax in general.

Records to gather

  • rent by property
  • agent statements
  • repair and maintenance invoices
  • mortgage interest or finance cost statements
  • ownership share and deposit records

Real examples for this situation

  • A one-property landlord with agent statements may mainly need to separate rent from deducted fees.
  • A jointly owned property needs the income share and expense share recorded clearly before a return is prepared.
  • An HMO or student let can create more repairs, deposits and utilities, so the transaction volume matters as much as the rent total.

A common mistake is using net rent received as the whole story and losing the deductions behind it. The safest pattern is to write down the figure, source, date and evidence before deciding whether DIY, software or accountant support is enough.

When to speak to an accountant

Speak to an accountant if there are multiple properties, unclear expense treatment, joint ownership, finance costs, property sales, non-residence or MTD preparation questions.

Questions to ask an accountant

  • Which rental records do you need first
  • Are these costs repairs or improvements
  • How should finance costs be shown
  • Does MTD apply to me and when
  • Should I separate records by property

Mistakes to avoid

  • Combining all properties into one unclear total.
  • Claiming improvements as repairs without checking.
  • Ignoring agent fees and statements.
  • Leaving MTD planning until the last minute.

Key takeaway

Landlords do not always need an accountant, but the case becomes stronger with multiple properties, unclear expenses, finance costs, joint ownership, MTD or deadline pressure. If the facts are not simple, use this as a prompt for a proper accountant conversation rather than a final personal answer.

Official guidance checked on 3 June 2026

Use these links to check current rules, thresholds and deadlines. They were checked during the current content pass, but should be rechecked before important decisions.

Related guides

Related accountancy pages

FAQs

How should I use this guide

Use it to understand the issue, gather useful records and prepare better questions for an accountant.

What should I check before acting

Check current GOV.UK or HMRC guidance, your own records and whether your circumstances have details that change the answer.

When is it worth speaking to an accountant

When the decision affects tax, deadlines, VAT, MTD, company structure, property income, payroll, software setup or anything you are not confident checking yourself.

Keep this current

Tax rules and thresholds can change. Check the linked official guidance and speak to an accountant before making important decisions.