Brendan Burgess
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Actually, I think that makes a lot of sense.As I said, bank the CG (depending on the circumstances) and avoid the CGT, and start again.
If it's your PPR then there would be fully PPR relief under Keep the Property. PPR relief from 200K to 400K is total. No CGT.Hi Bronte
It seems to depend on how much gains you have made to date and how it increases between now and when you sell it.
Example 1
View attachment 4536
I'm a bit tired today. Corona fatigue. That is what I was trying to say in my last post to Burgess. I'd like him to do it in tabular format. It's a long time since I calculated CGT and I think the current rate is pretty hefty.Actually, I think that makes a lot of sense.
I traded up in 2005, retaining my then PPR as a rental, which had roughly doubled in value from when it was first acquired. Over the next thirteen years, the value of the property roughly halved and then came back to roughly the value when it was first let out in 2005.
So I ended up with a substantial CGT bill when I sold the property, even though its value went nowhere over the thirteen years held as a rental.
With the benefit of hindsight, I would have been far better off banking the capital gain in 2005 and using the proceeds to buy a different rental property.
A (CGT free) bird in the hand....
The problem is that one can’t predict the future. I’m struggling to see circumstances where one would be better off moving from an investment property that was previously one’s PPR to a property that wasn’t (ignoring quality/location/etc).
retaining my then PPR as a rental,
the word, en-han-ce-ment is now gone ************* !!
I was young and foolish!But why did you retain it?
It was pretty commonplace to trade up while retaining an original PPR as a rental back in the mid-2000s so I suspect a lot of folks have experienced this particular roller-coaster.I think that they were very unusual circumstances such a huge increase followed by a decrease.
I did too and it made a significant difference to the final tax bill.luckily I have indexation
I think that they were very unusual circumstances such a huge increase followed by a decrease.
It was pretty commonplace to trade up while retaining an original PPR as a rental back in the mid-2000s
Well, my takeaway from this discussion is that it probably makes sense to realise a capital gain on a PPR rather than converting it to a rental, particularly in the absence of indexation relief.So the question is where are we now for someone facing that decision now?
Same thing happened to me, the rise during the Celtic Tiger was stratospheric, and the drop catestrophic. Such is property. There were other things that happened too at different times. Especially government interference. I remember Bacon caused no end of problems in the market, and that was so bad the government rowed back on it very quickly, three years I think it was.But why did you retain it?
Because you expected property prices to rise.
I think that they were very unusual circumstances such a huge increase followed by a decrease.
Brendan
In the middle of it I bought renovated, rented and sold. As it was so quick I remember indexation made a big difference, especially since I sold so high. I kept the PPR for other tax residency issues abroad and also it's my husband's home town so I didn't want him to feel I was cutting him off from that. Now he's been at me for ages to sell it. LOL. But it made a big difference to his tax situation that we could show we owned the family home in Ireland.I did too and it made a significant difference to the final tax bill.
The fact that indexation relief is gone is a further reason for realising any (CGT-free) capital gain rather than retaining a PPR as a rental.
Another thing about the past not to forgetMaybe I put that wrong.
A lot of people did what you did.
But the environment of a big rise followed by a big fall is unusual. (I can't read Coyote's graph but I doubt it's saying anything else)
So the question is where are we now for someone facing that decision now?
First, they will have had to have a big rise from the date of purchase to date.
And then the big fall would have to repeat itself.
Brendan
But the environment of a big rise followed by a big fall is unusual. (I can't read Coyote's graph but I doubt it's saying anything else)
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