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Council tax vs business rates for Airbnb hosts in 2026

Airbnb hosts face a council tax versus business rates decision that depends on whether the property is genuinely commercially let. The 140-day availability rule and the 70-night actual-letting threshold determine which regime applies, with material cost differences in both directions.

The basic question: council tax or business rates?

A property used for Airbnb or other short-term letting can fall into one of two regimes for property taxation. If it qualifies as a furnished holiday let under the Council Tax (Chargeable Dwellings) Order 1992 as amended, it is on the non-domestic rating list and pays business rates. If it does not qualify, it remains on the council tax register and pays council tax.

The two regimes have materially different cost structures. Business rates are based on the property's rateable value (assessed by the VOA) and the multiplier set by the government each year, with Small Business Rate Relief available for properties below £12,000 rateable value. Council tax is based on the property's band, plus any applicable premiums such as the new second homes premium from April 2025.

The 140-day rule

From 1 April 2023 the rules for furnished holiday lets in England tightened. To qualify for business rates rather than council tax, the property must:

  1. Be available to let as furnished holiday accommodation for at least 140 days in the preceding year
  2. Have been actually let as furnished holiday accommodation for at least 70 nights in the preceding year

Both thresholds have to be met. A property that was available for 200 days but actually let for only 50 nights does not qualify. A property that was actually let for 100 nights but only available for 130 days does not qualify either. The 140-day availability rule is intended to filter out properties that are kept furnished and occasionally lettable but used mainly as a second home.

The VOA assesses qualification annually. Hosts have to submit evidence of availability (marketing screenshots, calendar history) and actual letting (booking records, payment records, guest details). The assessment is fact-specific; the VOA does not take the host's word for it, particularly for properties that have just transitioned to the holiday let regime.

Why business rates is often cheaper

For many small holiday lets the move to business rates is financially attractive because of Small Business Rate Relief. SBRR provides:

  • 100 per cent relief for properties with a rateable value of £12,000 or less
  • Tapered relief between £12,001 and £15,000
  • No relief above £15,000

A small holiday let in a coastal village typically has a rateable value of £4,000 to £8,000, well within the 100 per cent relief threshold. The owner pays nothing in business rates after SBRR. The same property on council tax would pay £2,392 a year on Band D (national average), or up to £4,784 with the new second homes premium.

The cost differential is one of the main reasons for the policy tightening. Pre-2023 a large number of holiday lets were qualifying for business rates with very little actual commercial activity, costing local authorities council tax revenue and reducing housing supply. The 140/70 threshold was intended to push casual hosts back into the council tax system.

The second homes premium and Airbnb

From 1 April 2025 councils in England can charge a 100 per cent second homes premium on properties that are furnished but not occupied as anyone's main residence. A furnished holiday let that does not qualify for business rates (because it falls below the 140/70 threshold) is therefore typically subject to the second homes premium.

For a Band D property at the national average of £2,392, the second homes premium adds £2,392, taking the annual bill to £4,784. The same property on business rates with SBRR would pay nothing. This is a strong incentive for hosts to either commit to commercial letting (and qualify for business rates with SBRR) or to step back from short-term letting and use the property as a main residence (which removes both regimes).

Hybrid use: part-time letting

Many hosts use a property as a second home for some of the year and let it on Airbnb for the rest. If actual letting is below 70 nights and availability is below 140 days, the property remains on council tax and is subject to the second homes premium. The income from the short letting does not affect the council tax position; council tax is paid on the property regardless of letting activity below the threshold.

If actual letting is above 70 nights and availability above 140 days, the property qualifies for business rates and leaves the council tax system entirely. The owner still receives the rental income; the property is just classified as commercial premises for tax purposes for the period it qualifies.

Mid-year transitions are possible. A property classified as a holiday let for one year that falls below the threshold in the following year moves back into council tax. The transition normally occurs at the start of the next financial year, with the VOA notifying the council and the council issuing a council tax bill from 1 April.

The planning restriction proposal

Separately from the business rates question, the government has consulted on a planning restriction that would require planning permission for short-term letting above 70 nights a year in designated tourist areas. The proposal is at consultation stage as of May 2026. If implemented, it would require Airbnb hosts in tourist hotspots to apply for planning permission for change of use, with the council able to refuse if the cumulative short-letting in the area is deemed excessive.

The planning restriction would not change council tax or business rates directly, but would intersect awkwardly with the 70-night actual-letting threshold for business rates: a host who lets for 80 nights would qualify for business rates but would be subject to the planning restriction. The consultation has not yet led to legislation and the details remain fluid.

Reporting your status to the council

Hosts have a duty under the Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 to notify the council of changes in occupancy or use. A property moving from main residence to holiday let, or from holiday let to second home, has to be reported. The council adjusts the records and applies the appropriate premium or transfers the property to the VOA for business rates assessment.

For a property that qualifies for business rates, the VOA notifies the council, which removes the property from the council tax register. The host then receives a business rates bill from the council's business rates team, separately from the council tax process. The transition can take a few months to complete; the VOA backdates the assessment to the qualifying date once approved.

Related scenarios

For other tenancy structures see our single-let renter page, HMO tenant page, landlord with empty property page, and student house. For per-band cost see Band D cost 2026/27.

Frequently asked questions

Do I pay council tax on a property I let on Airbnb?
It depends. If the property is available to let as furnished holiday accommodation for at least 140 days in the year and actually let for at least 70 days, it qualifies for business rates instead of council tax. Below that threshold the property remains in the council tax system and you pay council tax on it as the owner (and may face the new second homes premium from April 2025).
What is the 140-day rule?
Under the Council Tax (Chargeable Dwellings) Order 1992 as amended, a furnished holiday let in England that is available to let for at least 140 days a year and actually let for at least 70 nights qualifies for non-domestic rates (business rates) rather than council tax. The Valuation Office Agency assesses qualifying properties and adds them to the non-domestic rating list.
Is business rates cheaper than council tax for an Airbnb?
Often, yes. Many small holiday lets qualify for Small Business Rate Relief, which can reduce the business rates bill to zero for properties with a rateable value below £12,000. So a small holiday let on business rates often pays nothing. By contrast, the same property on council tax (with the second homes premium) could pay £4,000 or more per year on Band D. This is why many serious holiday-let hosts move to business rates.
What changed in 2024 for furnished holiday lets?
From 1 April 2023 (and reaffirmed for 2024 and 2025) the 140-day availability and 70-night actual-let thresholds were introduced. Before 2023 the rules were looser and many properties on Airbnb were classed as holiday lets for business rates purposes without much in the way of actual letting. The 2023 change forces hosts to demonstrate genuine commercial letting activity, with evidence (booking records, marketing material, payment records) submitted to the VOA.
What is the proposed 70-night cap on Airbnb?
Separately from the business rates rules, the government has consulted on a planning restriction that would require planning permission for short-term letting above 70 nights a year. The proposal would apply specifically in tourist hotspots and would not change council tax liability directly, but would interact with the 70-night threshold for business rates in confusing ways. As of May 2026 the planning regime is still under consultation.
Do I pay council tax on a holiday let between bookings?
If the property qualifies for business rates as a furnished holiday let, it is on the rating list, not the council tax register. You pay business rates whether or not it is currently booked. If it falls below the 140/70 threshold, it moves back into the council tax system and you pay council tax (potentially with the second homes premium) for the periods it does not qualify.

Other payer scenarios

Single-let renter, HMO tenant, landlord with empty property, student house.

Not legal or financial advice. For your exact bill, contact your local council. For independent help, contact Citizens Advice.