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Stamp Duty Surcharge

I own my home mortgage-free. It is up to for sale but no offers yet.

Last week, I had an offer accepted on a property which I want to move into. It would be my main and ultimately my only home, but I could be in a position of paying 3% extra stamp duty. While I could reclaim, I dont have those funds available.

Could I transfer my existing property into my fathers name (he lives with me and has no other property), complete my purchase and sell my old home without the additional SDLT on my new property or SDLT on the transfer?

Comments

  • booksurr
    booksurr Posts: 3,700 Forumite
    ask your solicitor - that is what you pay them for after all: professional advice

    or if you are too afraid the answer may not be what you want to hear, read the guide yourself?

    https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/509184/GuidanceNote_Final.pdf
  • first thing I read but didnt find an answer
  • davidmcn
    davidmcn Posts: 23,596 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    edited 28 June 2016 at 8:28AM
    Your purchaser (or rather, your father's purchaser) will be concerned about a recent transfer of title - mortgage lenders don't like transactions where the seller has owned for less than six months, and there's the risk of a gratuitous alienation being challenged by your creditors if it turned out you had been insolvent at the time (you'll know that you're not, but somebody else will be looking for more evidence and/or insurance).
  • TBagpuss
    TBagpuss Posts: 11,237 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    How much is the tax likely to be? Have you looked into borrowing it? The cost of doing so may well be less than the costs involved in transferring the property.
    All posts are my personal opinion, not formal advice Always get proper, professional advice (particularly about anything legal!)
  • AdrianC
    AdrianC Posts: 42,189 Forumite
    Eighth Anniversary 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    In transferring the property into your father's name, you'd be making him a gift of the value of it.

    If he then sold it, and gifted you the money back, that would count as him depriving himself of assets if he needed residential care, and it would count as part of his estate for IHT purposes.

    If you're so tightly strapped on buying this property, why not sell the old one and link the two as a chain, like a very large percentage of house transactions?
  • sheramber
    sheramber Posts: 23,282 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts I've been Money Tipped! Name Dropper
    from the link above

    Individuals – purchase of a single dwelling – Condition D

    3.16 Condition D is that the purchased dwelling is not a replacement of the
    purchaser’s only or main residence19
    .

    3.20 There is a replacement of a main residence if, in the three years ending with the
    purchase, the purchaser disposed of a major interest in another dwelling24 and
    that other dwelling was, at some time in the three year period, the only or main
    residence of the purchaser25
    .
    3.21 There is also a replacement of a main residence if in the three years ending with
    the purchase, the purchaser’s spouse or civil partner disposed of a major interest
    in another dwelling and that other dwelling was, at some time in the three year
    period, the only or main residence of the purchaser.
  • Pixie5740
    Pixie5740 Posts: 14,515 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Eighth Anniversary Name Dropper Photogenic
    In an attempt to avoid paying the additional SDLT, could the OP's father be landed with a substantial CGT bill further down the line?
  • booksurr
    booksurr Posts: 3,700 Forumite
    thornberry wrote: »
    Could I transfer my existing property into my fathers name (he lives with me and has no other property),
    in principle SDLT is based on chargeable consideration so yes you could change the ownership and avoid the higher rate since your current place is mortgage free and would "merely" need to have the ownership transferred as a gift (so zero chargeable consideration)

    as others have pointed out however, there are other implications besides you avoiding what should only be a short time period cash flow problem before you get the refund back
    Pixie5740 wrote: »
    In an attempt to avoid paying the additional SDLT, could the OP's father be landed with a substantial CGT bill further down the line?
    unlikely given it appears it would become father's main residence - of course in the longer term he would have to remain resident whilst owning it
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