Learner2015
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1) The parent died in December 2015. What CAT thresholds can the children use, the ones at the time of parent death or the increased amounts from 2016?
Unless one party was living in the house the valuation date is the date of the grant of probate. If this is in the 12 months ended 31 August 2107 then the CAT is payble in November 17. The date of transfer is not the valuation date.2) what date does the clock start ticking for them to pay CAT, is it the valuation date or the date executor transferred house to them and is the date of transfer the same date probate is granted?
3) House was valued at €500k on valuation date now worth €600k. Children not selling house they are going to rent it out. When does the CGT liability become payable?
My father died recently and my brother (joint beneficiary with me) had been caring for him for his last two years following father's stroke. My brother claimed Carers Support Grant for those two years.Unless one party was living in the house the valuation date is the date of the grant of probate. If this is in the 12 months ended 31 August 2107 then the CAT is payble in November 17. The date of transfer is not the valuation date.
Hi Julius - I think Joe_90 was referring to CAT and not CGT. However, I don't know the answer but I also would like to know. If it applies to CGT then that would be great - but I don't think soMy father died recently and my brother (joint beneficiary with me) had been caring for him for his last two years following father's stroke. My brother claimed Carers Support Grant for those two years.
- Does this mean that we cannot use the date of Grant of Probate as the valuation date but instead have to use the Estate Agents valuation at date of death? In a rising house market and given the time it takes to get Probate granted the difference between the two valuations will be significant and hence the potential CGT will be high.
- If we have to use the EA's valuation at date of death, is there any way we can reduce the CGT e.g. deducting solrs & EA's fees from the CGT charge?
Sorry for your loss.My father died recentlyand my brother (joint beneficiary with me) had been caring for him for his last two years following father's stroke. My brother claimed Carers Support Grant for those two years.
- Does this mean that we cannot use the date of Grant of Probate as the valuation date but instead have to use the Estate Agents valuation at date of death? In a rising house market and given the time it takes to get Probate granted the difference between the two valuations will be significant and hence the potential CGT will be high.
- If we have to use the EA's valuation at date of death, is there any way we can reduce the CGT e.g. deducting solrs & EA's fees from the CGT charge?
There can be a different valuation date for beneficiaries so it could be the case that it's date of death for one and date of grant for the other.
So for my brother the valuation date for CAT purposes is the date of Grant of Probate and for me the valuation date for CAT is the date of death.The CAT is based on the value at the valuation date.
I understand the difference between CGT and CAT, I just did not read your previous post fully. For CGT purposes the valuation is valuation at date of death that was entered on the CA24 form. The difference between that value and the actual sold price of the house will mean a significant CGT liability. I'd like to know how I can reduce this liability?You keep referring to CGT so I'm not sure if you are confusing the Taxes or perhaps there is more that you have not said.
Myself and my brother are the executors and the only beneficiaries. We have sale contracts signed on the house and are awaiting the Grant to arrive. Our solicitor wrote to us saying that as neither of us were living in the house at the time our father died then there was no need for us to do a CGT return as there was no liability. However, he forgot that my brother rented his own house out and moved in with my father after father had a stoke when mother died and has since claimed Carers Support Grant (€1.5k x 2 years = €3k carers grant). I think our solicitor was confusing CGT with CAT.Is the house being sold by the executors before it is transferred to the beneficiaries? In which case it's the estate that is liable not the beneficiaries.
I take it that this exemption might apply for my brother.If you are living in the house and then potentially using the date of death as the valuation date then you may qualify for Dwelling house exemption which could reduce the CAT due and you may qualify for PPR relief and have no CGT to pay.
Once he has the Grant of Probate in his possession I will of course take the professional advice of the solicitor.You should seek professional advice specific to your circumstances
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