INVESTING
IN PROPERTY
By Atul Sharma (March 2005)
In
recent years there has been an explosion of investment activity
in UK property, particularly in the buy-to-let market. It is truly
amazing to observe how even the most unlikely people have invested
in bricks and mortar through the easier availability of mortgage
finance. Professionals, office workers, retailers, traders, businessmen
and even students find themselves on the property investment ladder.
Nowadays
no self-respecting business entrepreneur can afford to have an investment
portfolio excluding property assets.
Much
of the activity has been led by Asian entrepreneurs and families,
who now find themselves with substantial property portfolios and
high net worth.
As
a tax adviser I have seen this explosion first hand and observed
some of the consequences in providing solutions for family and personal
tax planning. Property investment is a long-term investment that
will most probably be passed from generation to generation. However
in many instances we find investors do not consider the tax consequences
of their current portfolios in the rush to manage rentals and further
grow the portfolio.
An
area often ignored is Inheritance Tax, a tax that has crept up unseen
in the past few years. It can be substantial - tax is charged at
40% on the estate value above £263,000 from 6th April 2004.
In many parts of the United Kingdom the total value of the home,
plus assets such as cash, investments, famil business and goods
is easily much more than this and so the potential tax can be huge
- for instance an estate of about £1,500,000 can easily clock
up a tax bill of £500,000. Yes - a bill of half-a million
for an estate of £1.5 million.
In
West London a reasonable personal residence plus one buy-to-let
property can easily reach such a figure. A detached property can
easily be over a £1,000,000 in Ealing or Richmond. Even in
other parts of the country, such as the West Midlands, an investor
with seven average buy-to-let properties can reach such a portfolio.
Faced with such values, despite the recent tightening of tax avoidance
schemes, investors can be comforted to know that there are still
planning opportunities available through good value tax advice.
In
the past a possible solution was to dispose valuable assets, principally
the main residence, albeit retaining its use, in order to remove
them from the estate. This has created large tax savings - but from
April 2005 this is being stopped as such a disposal will then have
to pay income tax on the market rent, if the asset is property or
an assumed interest if some other asset.
However,
there are still other alternatives if you plan ahead through the
use of trusts and gifts.
It
is important to remember that individual tax payers have their own
"nil rate band" (the initial amount that does not incur
tax) for Inheritance Tax and if they are wise they can arrange their
tax affairs to use them.
Married
couples often, naturally, leave assets to each other in the event
of death. No tax is payable on the death of the first spouse, but
this leaves you open for a much bigger tax bill when the remaining
spouse dies as they have only one nil rate band to use and they
have lost the use of the nil rate for the first spouse. The numbers
are clear - an extra £263,000 becomes taxable and the estate
can lose £105,200 (at 40%) to tax. Good professional advice
can avoid this and other potential tax.
For
instance a careful use of Trusts can help in saving tax. Many mortgages
have life policies which are taken to pay for the outstanding loans
but they need not be tied in to the property loan. The proceeds
paid on a life policy often add to the value of the estate - so
it may be more sensible to put the policy into a trust, a separate
entity. This has a triple benefit: tax is avoided; loans can be
paid from the estate and be tax-deductible; and proceeds being available
much faster for the remaining family.
An
additional planning opportunity is to purchase a term life policy
equal to the average expected tax liability and place the policy
into a trust to enable the IHT debt to be cleared from the estate.
If
large amounts of free surplus money and other liquid assets are
expected it may make sense to remove it from the future estate by
gifting to individuals or trusts. For instance capital may be invested
in an investment bond held through a trust, with the trust paying
income from the capital. With use of a suitably approved scheme
the arrangement can reduce the potential tax liability totally after
seven years and additionally remove any growth in capital in that
period out of the final estate. Gifts of up to £3,000 per
year are treated as potentially exempt transfers and are removed
from the tax calculation after seven years.
At
the end of the day any solution must bear in mind the personal and
emotional circumstances of the investors concerned. Clearly, there
is no point in gifting away your inheritance if it means that the
quality of life is affected or there is a risk to the capital. Anyone
seriously considering future tax planning is advised to seek sound
strategic options and level-headed advice from a proven professionals,
particularly a regulated, properly qualified accountant or independent
financial adviser (IFA).
ABOUT
ATUL SHARMA
Atul
Sharma is a Director of The GKP Partnership (a division of CPL Audit),
a professional accountancy and tax practice based in central and
west London. http://www.gkpp.com
email atul@GKPP.com
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