Why do some buy-to-let landlords thrive while others want to sell-up?

Director of PT Housing Ltd, John Pemberton, a loud voice for portfolio buy-to-let landlords was mentioned in a leading landlord website Landlord Zone. Founder Tom Entwistle, goes on to say the UK buy-to-let market is experiencing a significant divide: while many small-scale landlords are exiting due to mounting pressures, professional portfolio landlords are thriving and expanding.

Why Small Landlords Are Leaving:

  • Tax changes removing full mortgage interest relief (Section 24) hit higher-rate taxpayers hard
  • Rising interest rates (from 1.5-2% to 5-6%) wiping out profit margins
  • Increased regulations including the upcoming Renters’ Rights Act (May 2025)
  • Higher compliance burdens with licensing, safety standards, and EPC requirements
  • Stamp duty hikes and capital gains tax changes

Why Portfolio Landlords Are Buying:

  • Limited company structures allow mortgage interest deductions and lower corporation tax (25%) vs. personal income tax
  • Economies of scale across 5-20+ properties spread compliance costs and reduce per-unit expenses
  • Buying opportunities from forced sales at attractive yields
  • Geographic diversification targeting higher-yield regions (North West, North East, Wales, Scotland)
  • Professional systems using technology for remote management and compliance tracking

The New Model:

The article profiles John Pemberton, who manages 15 properties worth £2.75m, earning £12,000/month while working just 7 days per month. He uses HMO conversions, home equity lines of credit (HELOC), and buys across multiple regions.

Key Takeaway:

Buy-to-let isn’t dead—amateur landlording is. The market is professionalizing, favoring full-time landlords who operate through companies, maintain high standards, and treat property as a serious business rather than a passive income side-project.

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