Food & Drink1 min ago
Wills, Jointure and CGT
5 Answers
yes Boys and Gurlz
usually it is a question of: I am not insured - will I have to pay.
But listen to this question
If a house is owned jointly by A and B who are not otherwise related ie not man and wife (or partnership thingey). A dies and B gets the house automatically and not as a result of being left it by will
what is the tax position with respect to IHT and CGT ?
There has to be a tax charge soemwhere or else we would all make over our houses to joint owners who are unrelated.
usually it is a question of: I am not insured - will I have to pay.
But listen to this question
If a house is owned jointly by A and B who are not otherwise related ie not man and wife (or partnership thingey). A dies and B gets the house automatically and not as a result of being left it by will
what is the tax position with respect to IHT and CGT ?
There has to be a tax charge soemwhere or else we would all make over our houses to joint owners who are unrelated.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Peter Pedant. 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.It depends on how it is owned - joint tenancy or tenancy in common.
If it is a joint tenancy each person owns all the property and that doesn't disappear when the other party dies. So there is no tax to pay,
The question is - why would anyone want to do this? They can't leave their 'share' to whoever they like.
If it is a joint tenancy each person owns all the property and that doesn't disappear when the other party dies. So there is no tax to pay,
The question is - why would anyone want to do this? They can't leave their 'share' to whoever they like.
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