EIM11426 - Living Accommodation: housing for key workers: rented housing: new property
Rented housing: new property
For information on the scheme for Key Housing and the Starter
Homes Initiative, see
EIM21735.
The assistance for key worker rented housing may take the
form, not of a cash rental subsidy, but of land provided free or at
a discounted price to (usually) a registered social landlord (RSL),
or a subsidy for the land purchase or towards the building costs.
This subsidy is a contribution towards the cost of the
accommodation. Where the amount of the contribution exceeds
£75,000 there will be a benefit under S106 ITEPA 2003.
EIM11480 explains how to calculate the
value of this benefit and
EIM11483 gives an example.
Where there is more than one person contributing to the
costs, only the highest contribution is taken into account. (See
EIM11430 for the definition of the
person involved in providing the accommodation.)
Example: In May 2004, a local authority sells land
(which it has owned for a number of years) to a RSL for a 40-home
key worker rented housing development. At the date of sale, the
land has a market value of £3m but, since key workers include
employees of the local authority, the authority sells it for
£2m. Building costs to the RSL are £4m. The RSL receives
a £400,000 grant from Central Government to assist the scheme.
Notional GRV for each home is £1200 pa. Each employee pays
£100 per week rent (£5200 pa.)
Answer: The cost of the property is the highest of the amount contributed by
- the local authority who provided land worth £3 million* and
- central government contribution of £400,00 and
- the RSL whose total cost was £6 million (land at £2 million plus building costs of £4 million)
The highest cost is that of the RSL at £6 million. The cost of 1 unit is £150,000. The amount of the benefit from the living accommodation is
| Cost of accommodation | £150,000 | |
| Less | £75,000 | |
| Additional yearly rent of | £75,000 at 5% = | £3750 |
| Plus S105 benefit (GRV) | £1200 | |
| Less rent paid by employee of | £1200 | Nil |
| Total | £3750 | |
| Less excess rent of | ||
| Rent paid by employee | £5200 | |
| Minus set against GRV of | £1200 | |
| Excess rent is | £4000 | £4000 |
| Amount of benefit is | Nil | |
The benefit is nil because the excess rent is more than the
additional yearly rent.
*If the provider of the land acquired it less than 6 years
before the sale, for the purposes of S106, the cost to the provider
of acquiring that land is its actual cost and not its market value.
See
EIM11473, which explains whether market
value or cost applies.
