The Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, gave his Autumn
Budget 2022 at lunchtime, intending to deal with inflation and keep mortgage
rates down for homeowners.
In this short and sharp post, I wanted to touch on
what this would mean specifically for Thanet landlords and homeowners thinking
of buying and selling
Capital Gains Tax
Changes
In previous
articles about the Thanet property market, I touched on the muted plans from
2020 to increase the Capital Gains Tax (CGT) headline rate.
Instead, in the
Budget, the CGT relief allowance has been cut from £12,300 to £6,000 for the
next tax year (2023/4) and then cut again to £3,000 for 2024/5.
Therefore, if you are a basic rate taxpayer, you will end up paying
£1,134 extra in CGT after April 2023 (and £1,764 if a higher rate taxpayer) and
a further extra 50% on top of those figures in tax year 2024/5
Only second
homeowners and landlords pay Capital Gains Tax on the difference between the
price you paid for the property and the price you sold it for. (Note- it is not
paid on any gain of your principal residence)
This will be unwished-for news for Thanet landlords
and second-home owners
Even if you have no intentions of selling your
portfolio in the next five to ten years, there are things you could be doing
now to reduce your CGT liability in the future. However, there are various
reliefs [name of town] landlords can apply to HMRC for that will reduce the CGT
liability. If you would like some names of good local Thanet accountants, drop
us a line, and we can suggest some for you.
Is it worth selling your Thanet rental property
now? Well, the average conveyancing time for UK property from sale agreed to
exchange of contracts is 19 weeks, which takes us to 30th March
2022…all to save £1,764 …all at a time when rents have rocketed by 19% in the
last two years.
Stamp duty cut to stay
- yet only until 2025
Kwasi Kwarteng's cut to stamp duty in England
announced in his September Budget will remain until 31st March 2025.
Jeremy Hunt stated because housing activity will be
slower in 2023/4, the stamp duty cuts announced in Kwarteng’s mini-budget will
remain in place for the next two years and four months.
This means that the price of a property before
stamp duty is paid will stay at £250,000, up from the previous level of
£125,000 until March 2025, then drop down to the old rates.
This will be good news for Thanet home buyers and landlords in the coming years.
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