Is Air B&B legal?

Author
Discussion

Fastpedeller

Original Poster:

3,950 posts

152 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
Something which has been discussed at home for a while.......
B&B establishments have to get planning permission for change of use, fire safety check etc, but it would appear such things don't apply to Air B&B? Is this the case, and are all owners flying under the radar? I expect Air B&B are merely an agent and accept no liability.

Vipers

33,058 posts

234 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
Fastpedeller said:
Something which has been discussed at home for a while.......
B&B establishments have to get planning permission for change of use, fire safety check etc, but it would appear such things don't apply to Air B&B? Is this the case, and are all owners flying under the radar? I expect Air B&B are merely an agent and accept no liability.
What springs to mind is when the government insisted on fire retardent furniture after a specific date, all was well and good until one landlord asked the question, did it apply to accomodation rented furnished, thinking it was exempt.

Decision was it did apply, and landlords had to change out reasonably good condition furniture, but it didnt stop the tennent puttin in non fire reardent furniture.

So maybe when the question about AB&B is asked, they may be in for a shock.

GT03ROB

13,537 posts

227 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
I would suggest many AirBNB places are operating other than in accordance with the law.

QJumper

2,709 posts

32 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
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Here's aan article I found on the legalities:

https://www.houst.com/blog/is-airbnb-allowed-in-lo...

Stick Legs

5,656 posts

171 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
There is a couple I know who let on Air B&B.

The list of people who are unaware of the fact include but are not limited to HMRC, their mortgage provider and their insurers.

I have humbly suggested that if anything went awry that they would be up the creek without a paddle.

They think it’s fine.

I would be willing to bet that they are not alone

bigandclever

13,924 posts

244 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
I think that probably sums it up, Airbnb is perfectly legal; the operators underneath may not be. Take the 90 day rule in London, for instance. Airbnb restrict a property from being listed for 90 days in a year to comply with the law; so the operators do 90 days on Airbnb, 90 days on booking.com, 90 days on expedia, etc. And then they have multiple listings on each platform anyway and just bypass the system.

PurpleTurtle

7,464 posts

150 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
Stick Legs said:
There is a couple I know who let on Air B&B.

The list of people who are unaware of the fact include but are not limited to HMRC, their mortgage provider and their insurers.

I have humbly suggested that if anything went awry that they would be up the creek without a paddle.

They think it’s fine.

I would be willing to bet that they are not alone
Yeah, they are probably on a sticky wicket there (noting this is a couple of yeas old, I expect they've had a further helpful data drop)

https://www.informaccounting.co.uk/blog/hmrc-recei...

BoRED S2upid

20,193 posts

246 months

Wednesday 11th January 2023
quotequote all
Stick Legs said:
There is a couple I know who let on Air B&B.

The list of people who are unaware of the fact include but are not limited to HMRC, their mortgage provider and their insurers.

I have humbly suggested that if anything went awry that they would be up the creek without a paddle.

They think it’s fine.

I would be willing to bet that they are not alone
They may have a nasty surprise from HMRC one day as it’s easy for HMRC to find out if they are letting a property and they will just issues the fines for not filing the tax return. Likewise the council will want 150% (ours does) council tax backdated.