Question on LPA/property/tax…
Question on LPA/property/tax…
Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Theoretically speaking, asking for a friend etc etc


Assuming my friend has LPA over a single parent's finance and my friend sells their house while the parent is still alive meaning that money goes into their estate.

Does that mean you lose the extra tax free sum of having the property in the estate when they die (£500k vs £325k)? If my friends parent's will left the property to him?

I think that's how my friend described it biggrin

ta


I will pass on any advice to my 'friend' biggrin

alscar

8,350 posts

237 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Interesting /good question but I suspect the answer is no because there is now no longer a property just sale proceeds but having said that I just googled and this came up from Age UK. The second paragraph is possibly relevant but the third seems apt !



If you leave your property to your children or your grandchildren (including adopted, foster or step-children), you may gain an additional tax-free allowance of £125,000. This amount will increase by £25,000 every April until it reaches £175,000 in April 2020. Any unused part of this amount can be passed on to a surviving partner.

This additional exemption will also be available where someone who has died sold their home or downsized on or after 8 July 2015.

The rules are complicated and you should seek professional advice.

Happy Jim

1,072 posts

263 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
I think your friend might be in the space as my friend!

I don’t know the answer yet, but I have read (not enough digging to be definitive) that there might be a way of retaining the RNRB, but I think it involves care home constraints etc…..more research needed by my friend!

Jim

C69

1,142 posts

36 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Lots of information about the downsizing allowance for your friend to read here:

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/how-downsizing-selling...

It's also worth bearing in mind that any unused RNRB can in certain circumstances be transferred to a surviving spouse, so the estate of your friend's parent might benefit from that.

Given the complexities of IHT, I'd recommend that your friend seeks professional advice. It'd be very easy to get it wrong otherwise.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Thanks everyone I'll pass that on to my friend.
It sounds like my friend might be ok. His dad has gone in a home, is fortunate that he doesn't need to sell his house and is divorced.

I'll still suggest my friend consults an expert.

Ty
Mike's friend

Backtothenorth

198 posts

110 months

Saturday 13th May 2023
quotequote all
I'm battling with this issue at the moment.
The first quote I had from my MIL's solicitor was around £450ph but she also needs a junior helping her, so another £150ph, all plus VAT !!
My situation is this:
I have lasting POA over my in-laws.
They sold their family house in 2012 for about £950k.
Downsized to a retirement property near us for £550k.
In 2016 they both moved into a fantastic but v expensive Nursing home as FIL had v poor health (both in their 90s).
We kept the downsized house for 2 years in case any issue with the Nursing home.
In the meantime FIL passed away in the Nursing home in 2017.
Finally sold downsized house in 2018 for £630k.
MIL still with us in Nursing home aged 98 but fading.

So as POA I'm just trying to pre-emptively work potential IHT matters out in advance.
I want to do as much as I can before getting the solicitors involved !

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Saturday 13th May 2023
quotequote all
Yes, I think that's the thing ......get it all sorted and worked out before the inevitable happens to your MIL.

£450/hr plus a gopher wtf

We just need a website or something where you can bang the info in.