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Capital Gains - What's the deal?

Hi all

The places I can put my cash for a decent rate are dwindling fast, my Nationwide Reg Saver has just matured and I've just found out they've stopped selling this product. I'll put some in Atom or similar but under 2.5% and I feel like it's not worth the effort.

Really the only option I have is Stocks & Shares, I've already maxed out my ISA for the year and I can open a pension and put some money in there but I don't want it all locked away for the next 20 yrs. So I'll have to invest money in regular taxable funds. Now for my question, can someone in layman's terms explain Capital Gains?

Many Thanks
GOAL:- £400k in Savings by March 2026 SAVINGS: – £389,445 COMPLETE GOALS - Debt Free, Mortgage Free, £350k Savings Save 12k in 2025 #41 = £22,966 / £25,000
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Comments

  • eskbanker
    eskbanker Posts: 38,850 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    The government stuff at https://www.gov.uk/capital-gains-tax seems fairly simple and clear to me - try that for size and come back with any questions!
  • Tom99
    Tom99 Posts: 5,371 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Second Anniversary
    You buy shares for £x, later you sell those shares for £y.
    Your capital gain is £y minus £x.
    The 1st £12,000 capital gain in any tax year is tax free and the gain above £12,000 is taxed at either 10% of 20% depending on whether you are a higher rate taxpayer.
    You also pay income tax on any dividends above £2,000 at 7.5% or 32.5%
  • PRAISETHESUN
    PRAISETHESUN Posts: 5,019 Forumite
    Seventh Anniversary 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    https://www.gov.uk/capital-gains-tax

    In a nutshell you pay tax only on any "gain" you make due to the difference in buying price and the selling price. For example, if you were to buy shares/property/whatever for £1000 and then you sell for £2,500, you have £1500 of gains (£2500-£1000=£1500) which you would then be taxed on. The tax is only due when you "dispose" of the assets (ie. the date you sell them determines which tax year they are taxed in) and there is some sort of personal allowance for under which it is tax freee (a combined limit, not per sale).
  • AnotherJoe
    AnotherJoe Posts: 19,622 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Fifth Anniversary Name Dropper Photogenic
    If you are unwilling to take the tax benefits of a pension, then I suggest this year you buy your investments outside an ISA, but next year transfer them to an ISA and forget putting more cash into ISAs. Unless you are putting substantial amounts into investments this year its unlikely you'd hit the £12,000 CGT limit anyway and then going forward your money would be exempt not just from CGT but also all other taxes and you will have one less annoying tax return form to complete.
  • juststuff123
    juststuff123 Posts: 315 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    Thanks guys,

    In that case what's the tax that I've read about on here where you pay money on the difference between what a paid for a share / fund and it's value on a given date even if you don't sell? Or have i got that confused with something entirely different?

    I may have to get Investing for dummies!
    GOAL:- £400k in Savings by March 2026 SAVINGS: – £389,445 COMPLETE GOALS - Debt Free, Mortgage Free, £350k Savings Save 12k in 2025 #41 = £22,966 / £25,000
  • AnotherJoe
    AnotherJoe Posts: 19,622 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Fifth Anniversary Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 7 June 2019 at 11:03AM
    Thanks guys,

    In that case what's the tax that I've read about on here where you pay money on the difference between what a paid for a share / fund and it's value on a given date even if you don't sell? Or have i got that confused with something entirely different?

    I may have to get Investing for dummies!

    CGT is only calculated on any gains after you've sold. Gains dont exist / are not taxable "on paper" whatever the theoretical value. So yes you've got confused with something else.

    As a practical example I've got a lot of theoretical CGT wrapped up in some shares I own and am selling enough to be just under the £12k limit* each financial year. I've still got many times that "on paper" in the account - and of course they could crash and burn and then I'd regret not selling and paying the CGT earlier. You pays your money .....

    * limit on gains not sales
  • Tom99
    Tom99 Posts: 5,371 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Second Anniversary
    In that case what's the tax that I've read about on here where you pay money on the difference between what a paid for a share / fund and it's value on a given date even if you don't sell? Or have i got that confused with something entirely different?
    There is no such tax.
  • juststuff123
    juststuff123 Posts: 315 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 7 June 2019 at 11:15AM
    Excellent - It will take a while to hit the £12k mark for selling so I'll worry about that when i get there, I'll probably manage it like AnotherJoe and as long as there aren't any other little surprises i think I'm good to go. I'll make sure I do Accumulation funds to keep interest / income under £1000 per year. so no tax owed their either.

    Thanks Guys your all awesome!
    GOAL:- £400k in Savings by March 2026 SAVINGS: – £389,445 COMPLETE GOALS - Debt Free, Mortgage Free, £350k Savings Save 12k in 2025 #41 = £22,966 / £25,000
  • eskbanker
    eskbanker Posts: 38,850 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    I'll make sure I do Accumulation funds to keep interest / income under £1000 per year. so no tax owed their either.
    You seem to be confusing at least two different concepts there!

    The £1,000 threshold that I believe you're referring to is the personal savings allowance (for basic rate taxpayers), up to which you don't pay income tax on interest earned on savings.

    Dividend income paid from investments is treated separately and has its own tax allowance (currently £2,000).

    However, using Accumulation rather than Income variants doesn't shelter you from tax in the way you seem to be suggesting - dividend income is equally taxable from either, despite it being automatically reinvested in the Acc version.
  • JohnRo
    JohnRo Posts: 2,887 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    I'll make sure I do Accumulation funds to keep interest / income under £1000 per year. so no tax owed their either.

    ACC still pays a dividend, just internally.

    Better to use INC funds for unwrapped investing which will make income much easier to record and calculate for tax purposes.

    https://monevator.com/income-tax-on-accumulation-unit/
    'We don't need to be smarter than the rest; we need to be more disciplined than the rest.' - WB
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