Holiday Let or Buy-to-Let in Westminster: What the Numbers Show
Verdict: Buy-to-let wins decisively. The 90-night London cap limits holiday let gross revenue to roughly £27,886 per year, while buy-to-let generates approximately £62,018, making holiday letting mathematically unable to compete.
Best For: Appreciation-focused investors comfortable with low yields on premium assets. Buy-to-let only; holiday let cannot break even under the 90-night rule.
Scores out of 10 across yield, regulations, tax, risk, and market fundamentals. How we score
Underlying Assumptions (data as of April 2026):
- Property Price: 3-bedroom houses estimated at around £2,389,617
- Monthly Long-Term Rent: Approximately £5,328
- Holiday Let Nightly Rate: Around £397 per night (varies seasonally)
- Assumed Holiday Let Occupancy: 78% average across the borough (varies significantly between specific postcodes)
- Available Holiday Let Nights: 90 per year (London 90-day rule)
- Regulations: Restricted. Properties without planning permission are limited to 90 nights per year of short-term letting under the Deregulation Act 2015. Platforms like Airbnb automatically block bookings beyond 90 days for London addresses.
See your postcode's full holiday let vs buy-to-let breakdown in the dashboard
Estimates for a typical 3-bedroom house. Figures are modelled from market data; not guaranteed outcomes.
Westminster's gross buy-to-let yield of 2.7% sits below both the London average of 4.6% and the national average of 5.7%. Property prices are several multiples higher than the London median, while rents, though high in absolute terms, do not scale proportionally. This is the classic premium market trade-off: lower yield, higher capital growth potential.
Investors in Westminster are typically not chasing cash flow. They are buying into one of the world's most resilient property markets, where scarcity of supply, international demand, and the prestige of a central London address underpin long-term appreciation. The rental income covers holding costs; the real return comes when selling. Our data sources track both yield and price trends across all UK markets.
For investors who prioritise yield over appreciation, other London boroughs offer meaningfully higher gross returns at lower entry prices. Markets like Edinburgh face similar regulatory dynamics but at different price points. The choice depends on whether your strategy is income-led or growth-led.
Investment Bottom Line: Westminster Is a Buy-to-Let Appreciation Play
Westminster is not a market for yield-chasing investors. With buy-to-let gross yields at 2.7% and holiday lets unable to break even under the 90-night cap, the investment thesis rests on long-term capital appreciation and the stability of prime central London property.
The numbers are clear: buy-to-let generates around £62,018 per year in gross rent, netting approximately £30,595 after costs (1.3% net yield). Holiday letting produces just £-8,656 net. There is no scenario within the current regulatory framework where holiday letting outperforms.
| Investor Type | Fit |
|---|---|
| Cash Flow Focused | Poor |
| Appreciation Focused | Excellent |
| Holiday Let Operator | Not Viable |
| High Leverage (80%+ LTV) | Poor |
High leverage is particularly risky at these price points. With gross yields at 2.7% and mortgage rates significantly above that, leveraged investors will be cash-flow negative from day one. Westminster works best for equity-rich buyers who can absorb negative cash flow in exchange for long-term capital growth.
The postcode-level variation within Westminster is significant, with yields ranging from 6.8% in Mayfair/Savile Row (W1S) down to 4.0% in Strand/Covent Garden (WC2R). Explore rental data in the dashboard to model the specific postcode, bedroom count, and property type you are considering.
Data reflects market conditions as of April 2026.
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This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.