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Should Sister Be Allowed To Form A Civil Partnership Together? Strictly For Financial Reasons One Understands.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree and have continually said so. Legal and financial partnership benefits should be available to any two people who choose to do so. Its easy for unrelated couples of the same gender, they can just enter a into civil partnership, two people of different genders can marry, its relatives who lose out.
No, they should not be able to form a civil partnership. A civil partnership is for same sex partners who are not within prohibited degrees of relationships (eg siblings). The example given is for siblings – however, I can see other cases where a civil partnership would not be permitted – grandparent and grandchild, aunt and nephew, etc. I can see what the author is trying to achieve, but he has not thought this through. A Civil Partnership is not the answer. A change to the IHT laws is needed to assist those who have spent many years living together and where each depends on the other’s co-ownership of a property for their home. It doesn’t matter whether the co-habitee inherits through survivorship or through a Will – the outcome is the same inasmuch as once the nil rate band threshold for IHT is reached IHT is payable at 40%. Spouses and civil partners have the benefit of inheriting tax free and on the death of the survivor the beneficiaries have the benefit of a combined nil rate band (ie the combined value of two nil rate bands). Siblings in this situation don’t.
I would suggest a fairer tax regime where those who do depend on a close relative for their home and with whom they have cohabited have some tax concessions.
I would suggest a fairer tax regime where those who do depend on a close relative for their home and with whom they have cohabited have some tax concessions.
I accept that some pension companies will only pay the income to a surviving spouse or civil partner. But many more will continue to pay to a "Dependent" (I have just, in fact secured such a payment for a client with one simple letter). Income from a pension is not going to have any sort of IHT implications - lump sum payments will. This is why they can easily be written into trust. In any event the recent pension changes gives people flexibility to withdraw pensions and invest elsewhere. If someone is living with a sibling/friend/other relative, they have the ability to choose a pension which will protect that relative on death. They have no choice about an IHT bill.
The point the article was making was about co-habitee siblings having to pay a whopping IHT bill and as a consequence losing their home when they are, to all intents and purposes dependent on each other for their home.
I would think that the way of dealing with it would be on the same lines as Business Property Relief or Agricultural Property Relief - perhaps "Shared Property Relief".
The point the article was making was about co-habitee siblings having to pay a whopping IHT bill and as a consequence losing their home when they are, to all intents and purposes dependent on each other for their home.
I would think that the way of dealing with it would be on the same lines as Business Property Relief or Agricultural Property Relief - perhaps "Shared Property Relief".
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