Elizabeth Colman
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When do I have to pay capital gains tax (CGT)?
As a general rule, you have to pay CGT at a rate of 18 per cent if you sell something for more than you paid for it. Shares, land, buildings, part of a business and expensive antiques or jewellery are the sorts of things that will usually attract a CGT liability. However, you may also have to pay CGT if you merely give something away or receive compensation or prize money.
Exceptions to the tax
If your gains come to less than £10,100 for the tax year 2009-10, you will not have to pay any CGT.
You also do not have to pay CGT if you are selling or otherwise passing on personal belongings that are worth less than £6,000, or if you give assets to a registered charity.
Nor do you have to think about CGT when selling your private car and your main home, or when you receive money from Isas, Premium Bonds, betting, lottery or pools winnings, or personal injury compensation.
How to get out of paying CGT
Believe it or not, there are ways to avoid paying CGT that will not attract the ire of the taxman, though most of these techniques merely defer CGT to a later date or transfer it to another person.
One popular method is to transfer your assets to your spouse or civil partner. As long as you are legally married and living together there is no CGT to pay at that point. However, this transfers the legal ownership and CGT will have to be paid if and when he or she sells the assets.
You can also escape CGT in the short term by reinvesting gains under the Enterprise Investment Scheme. You need to make sure that you meet the qualifying conditions (see website below).
You can also reduce the amount of CGT payable on some assets by offsetting a loss. For example, if you make a loss when disposing of one asset that would attract CGT, you may be able to deduct this loss from capital gains that you have made on other assets.
Recent changes
In April 2008 the Government abolished taper relief, which had previously allowed some taxpayers to reduce their CGT bill by up to 40 per cent. Instead, a flat rate of 18 per cent now applies. At the time, owners of small businesses protested against the changes, which effectively increase the amount of tax that they have to pay because they are now no longer able to receive taper relief.
The Chancellor announced a partial climbdown when he unveiled plans for entrepreneurs’ relief. Business owners with a stake of more than 5 per cent in the company they work for will pay only 10 per cent tax on gains up to £1 million.
Calculating your CGT liability
First add up all the gains you have made from the sale of assets during the tax year, from April 6 one year to 5 April the next year.
The tax applies on the gain, not on the amount you sell it for. For example, if you bought shares for £500 and sold them for £2,000, you have made a gain of £1,500.
Then subtract costs, as well as any losses made on the disposal of other assets. You may also subtract the annual exempt amount, currently £10,100 for every individual.
You pay 18 per cent on anything left.
CGT when you give something away
You may have to pay CGT when you give something away, even if you do not receive any money for it or receive less than it is worth, if the asset has increased in value since you bought it.
Say you bought a flat for £75,000 and allowed a relative to use it. You later decide to sign the flat, now worth £100,000, to the relative. You have made a capital gain of £25,000 and must pay CGT on that amount. It does not matter whether you receive any money for the flat from the relative.
Paying the taxman
If you do not usually complete a tax return but wish to report a gain or loss, contact your local tax office and ask for a self-assesment tax return, including the relevant pages for CGT.
If you already receive a self-assessment tax return, it will tell you if you need to request and fill in the CGT pages.
You need to tell your local tax office in writing by the October 5 deadline if you have gains or losses to report from the previous tax year.
CGT on an inheritance
You do not have to pay CGT if you inherit something. However, if you later sell or give away the asset, you will have to pay CGT. For example, if a relative's will leaves you £6,000 of shares, you do not have to pay any CGT, but if you sell them later for £9,000, you may have to pay CGT on the gain of £3,000.
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I was given a house 23 years ago and would like to sell it as we have moved to a dfferent area. However I would obviously be subjected to capital gains tax. Would it be possible to transfer the property into my husband's name and then sell the property.
Alison Bush, Woodham Mortimer, Essex
We bought a flat in 2000 for £78000, lived in it until 2004, then re-mortgaged it to £135000 to raise capital for purchasing our current home, and to rent the flat out. If we sold the flat now, we would get circa £160000 for it, and have to pay a £7500 redemption fee. What CGT would we liable for?
mrs flanagan, brighton, east sussex
Tricia,
Your son would not be liable to pay CGT as the house he would sell is his sole property.
John Paul Reardon, London, England
My son bought a house 6 years ago intending to live with his girlfriend. They split up and he moved back in with me. He rented out the house paying income tax on the profit. He now wishes to sell the house and buy another to live in himself. Would he be liable for CGT on the profit from the sale?
tricia taylor, Crewe, UK
I have a question about CGT. I own a property which is uninhabitable. It was my intention to do it up and live in it. I can no longer afford to do it up and because it has been uninhabitable I have not been able to live in it. It is the only property I own. Will I have to pay CGT on when it sells?
Russell, godalming, uk
CGT Loophole Mark Atherton 22.03.08.
We followed the advice in previous editions of The Times and transferred a small property from my husband's name into mine. However, we feel we may have not read the articles carefully enough - Mark Atherton's piece specifically refers to 'indexation relief'' being 'banked'. Our property was purchased in August 1998 when taper relief had taken over from indexation relief. We assume therefore that the taper relief cannot be 'inherited' by me from my husband. We wonder if other couples have misread this advice too.
Ros Spinks, London, UK