BTL will still count against your residential mortgage. It didn't in years gone by but a portion of it does still affect your affordability criteria... well it certainly does for some lenders. There is some kind of percentage I think, I can't remember but check it out first.
You either let the old house or you rent it out. You don't rent it

I personally wouldn't bother with the tenant related issues. If you have a good letting agent that vets the tenants you should be okish. You might get scruffy people here and there but your nightmare from hell tenants are very very rare. Depends on area, type of house etc etc as well to some extent. I've been letting for many many years and I think I've had one tenant that didn't pay the last two rents and did one. Agent presumed they did it because the deposit would cover (which it didn't quite). Again I wouldn't be overly worried about CGT. It's a tax on profit so cut's the profit you would have got but it's still profit. Even after tax there aren't that many ways to earn the money a good let property can. The investment you use the money for could also fail as well. Spread your investments so if one goes belly up it's not the end of the world. I've got BLT's, personal savings and pension just to spread the risk.
I would personally speak to a trustworthy IFA if you are having trouble deciding what to do,

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