Property Developers - How Bad is Capital Gains Tax?
Property Developers - How Bad is Capital Gains Tax?
Author
Discussion

RedCabbage

Original Poster:

3,606 posts

256 months

Friday 23rd February 2007
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For straight forward buy to sell developers, what level of CGT are you paying on your projects?

jamesuk28

2,176 posts

277 months

Friday 23rd February 2007
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Same rate as income tax.

Eric Mc

124,901 posts

289 months

Friday 23rd February 2007
quotequote all
If you are "in business" as a property developer - then CGT doesn't apply. Profits obtained on the disposal of any properties would be looked on as normal "Trading Profits" and taxed under the normal Income Tax rules - and would also be subject to Class 4 National Insurance.

If the property disposal is a "one off", then the Capital Gains Tax rules would apply -

in this case, the tax applied to the "taxable" gain would be at your highest rate of tax - usually 40%.
However, before the gain is calciulated, you can take off Taper Relief (if the asset has been owned for over three years) and the owners of the property can also offset their share of the gain the Annual Capital Gains allowance - currently £8,800.
There would be no Class 4 NI liability arising either.

RedCabbage

Original Poster:

3,606 posts

256 months

Friday 23rd February 2007
quotequote all
Thanks that clears up my confusion.

chas100

346 posts

238 months

Sunday 25th February 2007
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Eric Mc said:
If you are "in business" as a property developer - then CGT doesn't apply.


Really? I thought you had to pay it weather it's your job or not? confused

Eric Mc

124,901 posts

289 months

Sunday 25th February 2007
quotequote all
No.

If you are running a bona-fide business which develops property as one of its trading activities, then the tax is calculated as it would be normally on the trading profits - not under Capital Gains Tax rules.

Whether an activity is a one off capital investment or a trading activity is not always clear. Indeed, this was one of the reasons why CGT was invented in the first place back in 1965.
In those days, you only paid tax on trading profits. If you bought and sold an item (such as land or property) as a one off transaction, you could argue that it was not a trading transaction and therefore escape tax altogether.

CGT was invented to catch these "non-trading" purchases and disposals.

chas100

346 posts

238 months

Sunday 25th February 2007
quotequote all
Thank for the reply Eric.