Really?Interesting.
Well the asset being disposed of is owned since 2002.
The construction of the house on it in 2006 was enhancement expenditure.
PPR can only apply for the period for which it was occupied as PPR (plus last 12 mths).
Interesting.
Well the asset being disposed of is owned since 2002.
The construction of the house on it in 2006 was enhancement expenditure.
PPR can only apply for the period for which it was occupied as PPR (plus last 12 mths).
Really?
OP, you need proper specialist advice here.
What's MIR Mandelbrot? Don't understand about the enhancement either. You are not surely saying the CGT is to be calculated on the increase from the site costs of 20K to it's current value of over 400K?
Do you disagree? I only had a quick look last night, but I couldn't see anything that would indicate otherwise - a person can only have one PPR at a time, and a greenfield site clearly isn't it unless there's a concession..?
There's a UK Special Commissioners Case - Henke & another v Revenue & Custom Commissioners (2006) that deals with apportionment in the case where a site was bought long before house was built - it was very clear in the decision that apportionment on PPR should be made as others have said.
[broken link removed]
(See Part 4 of the decision)
I had it in the back of my mind that as a Revenue Concession, PPR would apply if a person completed building within 12 months of buying site - can't find it in black and white now though.
PPR relief only serves to shelter you from a gain on the house you live in. In the case of the farmer or the OP, where were they living before he built the house?? In another house on which they would have had a gain sheltered if they sold it?
I'd imagine it is common but how many people actually file a Capital Gains Tax return on the sale of their house when they think that 100% PPR applies!!!
This sums up the highly unsatisfactory catch-22 nature of the tax system here.
I am now 26 years working as an accountant. I live and work in a rural area. I have a particular interest in CGT. Yet I have never seen or heard of this being an issue before, although its likely to affect tens (if not hundreds) of thousands of people.
If I am ignorant of this, how is an ordinary citizen meant to anticipate and comply with it? Remember if they don't, they end up being forced to settle a large tax bill and being publicly shamed in a tax defaulters list.
It would be very very rare indeed the house that was built on a site that was just transferred that didn't cross two tax years.
This sums up the highly unsatisfactory catch-22 nature of the tax system here.
I am now 26 years working as an accountant. I live and work in a rural area. I have a particular interest in CGT. Yet I have never seen or heard of this being an issue before, although its likely to affect tens (if not hundreds) of thousands of people.
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