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Declaring a Gift
amitl
Posts: 13 Forumite
in Cutting tax
Hi,
I am receiving a 20k gift from a family member soon.
I do not receive any benefits and have FT employment.
Do I need to declare this gift to HMRC?
Also, what is the best way to prove it is a gift?
Thanks
I am receiving a 20k gift from a family member soon.
I do not receive any benefits and have FT employment.
Do I need to declare this gift to HMRC?
Also, what is the best way to prove it is a gift?
Thanks
0
Comments
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No declaration necessary - no tax on gifts in the UK.
Get the donor to state that is a gift i.e. not repayable and keep the documentation. Most good accountants will ask for this in order to ensure that granny's gift should not be included in self-employed accounts, for example.There are 10 types of people in the world - those who understand binary and those who do not. :doh:0 -
Hi,
I am receiving a 20k gift from a family member soon.
I do not receive any benefits and have FT employment.
Do I need to declare this gift to HMRC?
Also, what is the best way to prove it is a gift?
Thanks
No and it can be evidenced by a letter from the donor to the recipient stating it is a gift.The only thing that is constant is change.0 -
You don't have to prove anything, there is no tax liability on gifts. However if the person giving you the gift were to die within 7 years, then the value of the gift would have to be taken into account when inheritance tax was being calculated for the estate.0
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TadleyBaggie wrote: »You don't have to prove anything, there is no tax liability on gifts. However if the person giving you the gift were to die within 7 years, then the value of the gift would have to be taken into account when inheritance tax was being calculated for the estate.
"You don't have to prove anything" to HMRC maybe but the OP may want to prove it somewhere else or just want added comfort.The only thing that is constant is change.0 -
No tax on gifts unless it subsequently forms part of your relatives estate if they die within 7 years & only then if estate is over inheritance tax threshold.
Just be mindful of money laundering regulations in that your bank will report a large deposit so some proof of the gift may be useful to show where it came from in case HMRC come sniffing thinking it's undeclared earnings0 -
No tax on gifts unless it subsequently forms part of your relatives estate if they die within 7 years & only then if estate is over inheritance tax threshold.
Just be mindful of money laundering regulations in that your bank will report a large deposit so some proof of the gift may be useful to show where it came from in case HMRC come sniffing thinking it's undeclared earnings
the bank may or may not report a large deposit
20k isn't a large amount to deposit0 -
Getting an explanatory letter is sensible in case, for instance, you want to take out a mortgage and the bank/BS wants to know where your deposit comes from.Free the dunston one next time too.0
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