We'd like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum... Read More »
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
Calculating CGT tip

capital0ne
Posts: 872 Forumite

An investment I have outside of an ISA wrapper has increased in value by 32.55%
The CGT allowance for 2017-18 is £11,300
To work out the value of shares to sell to remain within the CGT allowance you simply divide £11,300 by the percentage increase.
In this example the calculation is £11,300 / 0.3255 = £34,715 is the value of shares to sell and remain within the CGT allowance for 2017-18
Quite simple really, but some people may struggle with working this out. :beer::T:beer:
The CGT allowance for 2017-18 is £11,300
To work out the value of shares to sell to remain within the CGT allowance you simply divide £11,300 by the percentage increase.
In this example the calculation is £11,300 / 0.3255 = £34,715 is the value of shares to sell and remain within the CGT allowance for 2017-18
Quite simple really, but some people may struggle with working this out. :beer::T:beer:
0
Comments
-
capital0ne wrote: »An investment I have outside of an ISA wrapper has increased in value by 32.55%In this example the calculation is £11,300 / 0.3255 = £34,715 is the value of shares to sell and remain within the CGT allowance for 2017-18
Quite simple really, but some people may struggle with working this out.
If the investment has gone up by 32.55% of its original price, as you suggest. Then every 10,000 of original cost is now worth £13,255.
So of every 13,255 of proceeds you get, £10,000 will be cost and £3,255 will be gain.
Another way of saying that, is that of what you sell, 3255/13255ths of it those proceeds (about 24.6% of it) will be gain.
So if 24.6% of what you sell is gain, and you follow your rules that: "£34,715 is the value of shares to sell and remain within the CGT allowance", then when you sell shares valued at £34715, you will get a gain of only £8525. Which is well within your allowance, so no tax to pay, but is almost £3k short of using up your allowance.
The maths on that from the other end would be:
- bought shares for a cost of £26190
- they went up in value by 32.55%, to a value of 1.3255 x 26190 = 34715
- so when you sell shares valued at 34715 you are selling shares which had cost 26190
- the difference between what you get on sale (34715) and what you paid (26190) is what you have gained (8525).
- which is well short of using up your allowance.0 -
I think £34,715 is the original cost of the shares to sell not value.
So £34,715 + 32.55% (£11,300) = £46,015 value to sell
£11,300/0.3255+£11,300=£46,0150 -
capital0ne wrote: »Quite simple really, but some people may struggle with working this out0
-
-
Thanks Bowlhead, and Tom99, my tactic worked. By posting an answer that wasn't quite right challenges people to put it right, whereas a simple query usually results in a link to aa CGT calculator or no reply whatsover.
Many thanks to both of you0 -
capital0ne wrote: »Thanks Bowlhead, and Tom99, my tactic worked. By posting an answer that wasn't quite right challenges people to put it right, whereas a simple query usually results in a link to aa CGT calculator or no reply whatsover.
Many thanks to both of you
I wish all my faux pass could be exited so gracefully.0 -
Simple formula time
CGT Allowance / (1 - 1/gain) where the gain of 32.55% is represented as 1.3255
Thanks all0 -
I wish all my faux pass could be exited so gracefully.
Say something emphatic, foot it with "simples!" or clappy beery emoticons and then when corrected you have the choice of just ignoring the correction or saying that you were just trolling for the correct response. Then people can look at your posts on other threads and try to conclude whether you're an ignoramus or a troll or both...
Not that I'm suggesting people think that way of capital0ne, of course.0 -
bowlhead99 wrote: »They could be if you didn't mind the reputational risk of being known as a person who was always needing to find an exit for your cheery mistaken proclamation.
Say something emphatic, foot it with "simples!" or clappy beery emoticons and then when corrected you have the choice of just ignoring the correction or saying that you were just trolling for the correct response. Then people can look at your posts on other threads and try to conclude whether you're an ignoramus or a troll or both...
Not that I'm suggesting people think that way of capital0ne, of course.0 -
Glad you like my reply, here's a fix for your badly explained formula:capital0ne wrote: »Simple formula time
CGT Allowance / (1 - 1/gain) where the gain of 32.55% is represented as 1.3255
CGT Allowance / (1 - 1/ratio of current value to original cost).
Better than calling 'the ratio of current value to original cost' (1.3255 in this formula) the 'gain' and then having to redefine what you mean by gain to make it work.
In CGT parlance the 'gain' is a difference between value and cost. Not a valuation multiple that gives you the current value when you multiply it by the cost.0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply

Categories
- All Categories
- 351.4K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.3K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 453.8K Spending & Discounts
- 244.4K Work, Benefits & Business
- 599.7K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177.1K Life & Family
- 258K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16.2K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.6K Read-Only Boards