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Some people regularly purchase run-down houses,
do them up and sell them on. If you do this as part of your building/property
development business, the profits made on the sale of the properties may be
taxed as trading income (tax rates: 20%, 40% or 50%).
If you let the renovated properties, then sell them at a later date, the profits made on those sales will be taxed as capital gains (tax rates: 18% or 28%). The position is less clear cut if you live in each property for a period either during or after the renovations are undertaken. The Taxman is keen to charge any profits made on the renovated property as trading income, because if the profits are categorised as a capital gain, that gain may well be exempt from tax on the basis that the property was your main residence. For the Taxman to prove the money made from the property is trading income he must show the owner's motive for purchasing and renovating the property was to make a profit, and not simply to make the property more comfortable for the owner to reside in. This is difficult to prove. If the owner is a builder by trade the Taxman may also argue that the property renovation was undertaken as part of his building business, even if he also lived in the property. The Taxman may say the profits should be taxed as a trade if the owner has a history of purchasing and renovating many properties and living in each for only a short period.
If you would like to save more tax and get advice
from property related specialists, please contact Greg Greatbatch at greg.greatbatch@belvoirlettings.com
or telephone 01264 351222 (opt 2).
Belvoir Andover has been operating as a lettings
specialist in Andover since 1997. Belvoir Lettings is a national network of franchise
offices dedicated to offering the highest possible levels of customer service
to both landlords and tenants. Visit www.belvoirandover.com for more information about us.
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Monday, 5 November 2012
Avoid Property Trading Tax by Belvoir Andover
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