This is the first UK tax year in which non UK residents will be subject
to Non Resident UK Capital Gains Tax (NRCGT)
when disposing of their UK residential property to anyone other than their
spouse/civil partner or to charity. Non
resident trustees and personal representatives pay NRCGT at 28% on taxable
gains and individuals pay 18% or 28%, depending on their taxable UK income and
other UK gains in the tax year in which the gain arises. If non resident companies are not subject to Annual
Tax on Enveloped Dwellings – CGT (ATED-CGT), which always takes precedence,
they pay NRCGT at 20% instead. Only
closely held companies are affected by NRCGT.
Thursday, 28 May 2015
Thursday, 14 May 2015
The Reluctant Will Maker
When you are surrounded by wills on a daily basis (as I
am), it’s easy to forget that, for some of our clients, even the thought of
making a will is a stressful business, to be avoided at all costs. This was brought home to me recently when I
met a couple of Family Office bankers.
They explained that some of their clients find the whole will making
process a bit daunting. The lawyer asks
a lot of serious and scary questions, such as what should happen to the family
business, when should the children inherit, who should be their guardians etc.
etc. and then nothing gets done! As a
lawyer, this is exactly what I don’t want to see happening, as I know the
profound family heartache and disruption that can arise if someone dies without
a will (see my blog: ‘Dying without a will – the hard facts’ 3 July 2014; I’m
afraid that might indeed scare you).
Thursday, 30 April 2015
Pension death benefits planning: a question of control
Before the recent pension changes were announced, it made
sense, for Inheritance Tax (IHT) planning
purposes, to request that any death benefits payable from a money purchase
private pension on the pension scheme member’s death were paid into a separate
trust (a ‘bypass trust’), usually for the benefit of the member’s spouse and
family. Structuring matters in this way
would prevent what could sometimes be significant sums from being paid direct
to the surviving spouse, with the potential for any unspent funds to be taxed at
40% IHT on the surviving spouse’s death.
On the other hand, by using the trust route, the spouse could still
enjoy full access to the pension funds via loans made from the trust, which
have the potential to be deductible for IHT purposes on the survivor’s death.
Thursday, 16 April 2015
Mixed domicile couples
Non-doms are in the
news again, with one British political party wanting to scrap non-domiciled
status if they are elected to be the next Government on 7 May. This sort of headline reinforces the casual
view that being a non-dom is always advantageous for UK tax purposes. However, if you are part of a mixed domicile
couple, where one of you is UK domiciled and the other isn’t, you might
disagree. Estate planning is not plain
sailing for you.
Wednesday, 8 April 2015
ATED tips and traps
Apologies to all my regular Thursday readers but the electrical fire in Kingsway last week disrupted internet connectivity. Here is last week's blog. The next post is scheduled for Thursday 16 April.
Financially minded Brits will be
focused on the impending end of the British income tax year. Here in the office, we’re also focused on the
start of another one – the 2015/2016 Annual Tax on Enveloped Dwellings (ATED) tax year begins on 1 April 2015
and, for UK residential properties valued for ATED purposes as worth £2 million
or over, owned by ‘non-natural persons’ such as companies, the ATED tax returns
and any tax due must be in by 30 April 2015.
Thursday, 19 March 2015
How to save Inheritance Tax on your main residence
Successful Inheritance Tax (IHT) mitigation in respect of the main
residence is one of the hardest things to do, as the law currently stands. However, as many people’s most valuable asset
is their bricks and mortar, it is a problem that demands some consideration –
even if the answer is to do nothing (yet) or take out life cover written in
trust. But if neither of those appeals,
what then?
Thursday, 5 March 2015
Can I take instructions from my client’s attorney?
You have been managing your client’s money for many years
when, out of the blue, you are contacted by someone claiming to be your
client’s attorney. The attorney is
brandishing a copy English Property and Financial Affairs Lasting Power of
Attorney (LPA), certified on every
page (as it should be) by the donor (i.e. the giver) of the power. So far, so reassuring. But is it safe for you to act on the
attorney’s instructions? Here’s some food
for thought.
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