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New CGT rules on disposal of Residential Property Investments

From April 2019, a payment on account of any CGT due on the disposal of residential property will be required to be made within 30 days of the completion of the disposal. This will not affect gains on properties which are not liable for CGT due to Private Residence Relief. The government will publish draft legislation for consultation in 2016.

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/main-tax-announcements-for-autumn-statement-2015/main-tax-announcements-for-autumn-statement-2015
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Comments

  • chucknorris
    chucknorris Posts: 10,793 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper

    Thanks, Trev I thought I heard something about CGT when I was watching it live, but I was only half listening at the time, and then when I looked for it in the detail I couldn't find it.
    Chuck Norris can kill two stones with one birdThe only time Chuck Norris was wrong was when he thought he had made a mistakeChuck Norris puts the "laughter" in "manslaughter".I've started running again, after several injuries had forced me to stop
  • Generali
    Generali Posts: 36,411 Forumite
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    Interesting. I wonder why? Is people moving abroad without paying CGT a big problem I wonder or maybe slamming the door before the horse gets going for a change.
  • antrobus
    antrobus Posts: 17,386 Forumite
    Generali wrote: »
    Interesting. I wonder why? Is people moving abroad without paying CGT a big problem I wonder or maybe slamming the door before the horse gets going for a change.

    Possibly.

    But non-residents are already required to report disposals of residential property and cough up any CGT within 30 days.

    https://www.gov.uk/guidance/capital-gains-tax-for-non-residents-uk-residential-property
  • padington
    padington Posts: 3,121 Forumite
    One way of bolstering cash pile before the election.
    Proudly voted remain. A global union of countries is the only way to commit global capital to the rule of law.
  • chucknorris
    chucknorris Posts: 10,793 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    Generali wrote: »
    Interesting. I wonder why? Is people moving abroad without paying CGT a big problem I wonder or maybe slamming the door before the horse gets going for a change.

    I think that it is just cash flow, when you submit self assessment returns you pay in Jan/July for the preceding April, so quite some delay. This is offset by a 50% payment in advance based upon the previous year, but as CGT property disposals tend to be a one off event, there wouldn't have been an allowance in the advance payment for a CGT disposal.
    Chuck Norris can kill two stones with one birdThe only time Chuck Norris was wrong was when he thought he had made a mistakeChuck Norris puts the "laughter" in "manslaughter".I've started running again, after several injuries had forced me to stop
  • Generali
    Generali Posts: 36,411 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    I think that it is just cash flow, when you submit self assessment returns you pay in Jan/July for the preceding April, so quite some delay. This is offset by a 50% payment in advance based upon the previous year, but as CGT property disposals tend to be a one off event, there wouldn't have been an allowance in the advance payment for a CGT disposal.

    That's a good point and presumably the Treasury is expecting a lot of CGT events to occur as a result of the changes to the BTL rules.

    It'd be interesting to see Treasury modelling on those BTL changes. I suspect that they might well have quite a sting.
  • chucknorris
    chucknorris Posts: 10,793 Forumite
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    Generali wrote: »
    That's a good point and presumably the Treasury is expecting a lot of CGT events to occur as a result of the changes to the BTL rules.

    It'd be interesting to see Treasury modelling on those BTL changes. I suspect that they might well have quite a sting.

    Our eventual (total) CGT bill will be about £750k so that's a fair amount of dividend income/interest that we would have received for the time lag period. That's if it hadn't of been for that pesky chancellor (it's fair enough, I can fully understand he sees that as his benefit, not ours). I wonder how much the advance percentage will be, I can't see why it won't be 100%, but I can hope for less.
    Chuck Norris can kill two stones with one birdThe only time Chuck Norris was wrong was when he thought he had made a mistakeChuck Norris puts the "laughter" in "manslaughter".I've started running again, after several injuries had forced me to stop
  • cells
    cells Posts: 5,246 Forumite
    Our eventual (total) CGT bill will be about £750k so that's a fair amount of dividend income/interest that we would have received for the time lag period. That's if it hadn't of been for that pesky chancellor (it's fair enough, I can fully understand he sees that as his benefit, not ours). I wonder how much the advance percentage will be, I can't see why it won't be 100%, but I can hope for less.


    he is becoming the penny pinching chancellor but maybe that is what the nation needs.

    In your example of £750k if delayed for a year it would be worth about £7,500 more to him in interest collected this month rather than a year from now.

    Maybe in the future Solicitors will be required to pay the clients CGT (like they do stamp duty) from sale proceeds rather than leaving it for the owner to do. Maybe they will take 28% of the gain and leave it for the client to reclaim if they are in the lower band. Lots of people simply do not follow or know anything about tax. My guess is lots of people (the 'accidential landlords' with just one BTL that used to be the main home) sell their rentals and pay no CGT as they simply don't know the rules. Having the solicitors do it would get rid of that potential error
  • chucknorris
    chucknorris Posts: 10,793 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    cells wrote: »
    he is becoming the penny pinching chancellor but maybe that is what the nation needs.

    In your example of £750k if delayed for a year it would be worth about £7,500 more to him in interest collected this month rather than a year from now.

    Maybe in the future Solicitors will be required to pay the clients CGT (like they do stamp duty) from sale proceeds rather than leaving it for the owner to do. Maybe they will take 28% of the gain and leave it for the client to reclaim if they are in the lower band. Lots of people simply do not follow or know anything about tax. My guess is lots of people (the 'accidential landlords' with just one BTL that used to be the main home) sell their rentals and pay no CGT as they simply don't know the rules. Having the solicitors do it would get rid of that potential error

    Yes I could see that working like stamp duty, it would protect fools from blowing money within 30 days etc.
    Chuck Norris can kill two stones with one birdThe only time Chuck Norris was wrong was when he thought he had made a mistakeChuck Norris puts the "laughter" in "manslaughter".I've started running again, after several injuries had forced me to stop
  • michaels
    michaels Posts: 29,133 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    We sold in Jan and will have to pay 20k before the end of this Jan...but with interest rates so low we haven't really benefitted that much.

    Aren't there some figues in another thread suggesting the 3% non-ppr cgt will raise about 800m pa suggesting of order of 25 billion in annual transactions or 125k transactions at 200k a pop - does that sound reasonable?
    I think....
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