
As a general rule, the fall-back position for couples who live together with their spouse or civil partners is that property income – where the property is owned in joint the names – is divided 50:50. This is the regardless of the actual ownership structure. However, where there is unequal ownership and the couple wants the income taxed on that basis a notification must be sent to HMRC together with proof that the beneficial interests in the property are unequal. This is done using Form 17 published by HMRC.
A Form 17 declaration can only be made by spouses or civil partners that are living together and own property in unequal shares with the income being allocated in proportion to those shares. Couples that are separated or in some other type of union cannot make a Form 17 declaration. The declaration is only valid if both partners agree. If one spouse/partner does not agree then the income will continue to be treated on a 50:50 basis even if the ownership structure is different.
A Form 17 declaration stays in place until there is either a change in the status of the couple i.e. separation or divorce or a change in the ownership structure. If either of these occurs the 50:50 income split will reapply.
There are a number of scenarios where a form 17 cannot be used, such as where a husband and wife or civil partners own property as the beneficial joint tenants, for commercial letting of furnished holiday accommodation, and for partnership income.
Where property is held in an unequal split, making a form 17 declaration can have a tax advantage where, for example, the majority owner of the property pays tax at a lower marginal rate than their partner.
Buying two or more homes together can trigger special stamp duty and property transaction tax rules across the UK. The...
Submitting a VAT return on time is one of the most important VAT responsibilities for UK businesses. A missed deadline...
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has adopted a significantly tougher stance on VAT investigations for large businesses recently. Investigations into...
From 1 May 2026, the UK VAT road fuel scale charges change to cover the period to 30 April 2027....
Two UK brothers were recently convicted for abusing the government’s film tax relief scheme. Between 2011 and 2015 they submitted...
In a 2026 tax appeal, the First-tier Tribunal (Tax) upheld HMRC’s view that a written-off director’s loan triggers an income...
Recent headlines cite official UK data showing that HMRC spent “£186 million” enforcing the loan charge. The loan charge enforcement...
The position is now much clearer. Retail access to certain crypto exchange-traded notes (crypto ETNs) in an IFISA was reopened...
The VAT payroll fraud case in brief On 21 April 2026, a Scottish court case ended with four prison sentences...
Slow adoption despite clear government deadlines HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) achieved a major milestone on 6 April 2026, when...