ChatterBank1 min ago
Capital Gains Tax - A query
I bought a property in 1996 lived in it for 14 months then moved away for work for 5 years (where I rented a place to live and also rented out my house).
I have since returned to my original location and sold my old house because it was too small to move back into and bought a bigger house to live in.
Will I have to pay CGT on the profit on my old house? I havent really benefited financially at all in real terms
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by shrewster. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You are in a pretty good position as you did in fact live in the house at some point. After calculating the gain on the property, you are entitled to the following reliefs/deductions
- costs of sale and purchase, including stamp duty
- costs of any improvement work done to the property (not general maintenance)
- inflation allowance for the period up to April 1998
- a time apportionment of the gain for the period you actually lived there, the final 3 years of ownership, and perhaps for the remainder of the time if you were forced to move away because of your work
- Lettings relief of up to �40,000 (although this calculation can get complicated!)
- A taper relief relating to the period of ownership (this could be 30 or 35% in your case)
- Your annual exemption from Capital Gains Tax of �8500.
I would contact your local Tax Office for assistance with the calculation of the gain.