Your loss is your gain

Daniel Liddicott
July 2024  •  3 min read

Your loss is your gain

You may recall from my recent piece in Spotlight that capital gains tax exemptions have fallen yet again for the 2024/25 tax year. As a reminder, you can now realise gains of up to £3,000 before having to pay capital gains tax (CGT). This allowance was £6,000 last tax year and £12,500 the tax year before that. The reduced £3,000 capital gains exemption affects those of you with General Investment Accounts (GIAs) in particular, as these are not sheltered from CGT, unlike your ISAs and pensions.

It is now more likely than ever that moving funds from your GIAs into your ISAs and/or pensions may result in the need to pay some CGT, at 10% or 20% dependent upon whether you are a basic, higher or additional rate taxpayer. It is important to understand that you only “realise” a gain if investments in your GIA are sold, which is the case if the funds are being withdrawn or moved into an ISA, for example.

The reason for carrying out this strategy year upon year has been to gradually move funds out of the less tax-efficient GIAs into the tax-efficient ISAs and pensions, which are sheltered from paying tax on any future capital gains.

A key factor that we can use to help you to reduce or, in some cases, completely remove the need for you to pay CGT on gains within your GIAs is to register any losses made in previous tax years. You can actually register losses made in any of the previous four tax years, to be used to offset against any gains that you make in future. And you can carry these valuable losses forward indefinitely until used. Example incoming:

You can now “realise” gains of up to £7,000 without any CGT payable.

Unfortunately, these losses are not automatically registered with HMRC. You can do this either in your tax return for 2024/25 if you usually submit these, or you can write to HMRC instead. We are putting together a guide and letter template that you can use to send to HMRC to register losses to make the process as easy as possible.

We are currently looking back through the previous few tax years to determine who has made losses that can be registered and used moving forwards – if this is you, you should expect to hear from us in the next few months.

Whilst, generally speaking, falling valuations of your investments is a negative experience, we can help you to make the most of these. Your past loss can become your future gain.

Your loss is your gain2024-07-05T13:03:05+01:00

INHERITANCE TAX IS EASY MONEY FOR HMRC

TODAY’S BLOG

INHERITANCE TAX IS EASY MONEY FOR HMRC

Few weekends go by without one of the main newspapers doing a story on inheritance tax. I imagine that is because inheritance tax is often cited as the most loathed tax. The general view being that Government gets taxes whilst you are alive and the final indignity is to take more upon death. A 2015 YouGov report indicated its unpopularity.

If you have been reading any of my blogs over the years, you will know that I am rather sceptical of surveys and their results being understood to represent an entire population. The survey in question had a sample size of 1,975 adults. Not enormous out of a population of 66million. There are all sorts of problems with sampling data – but I digress, it is from my anecdotal experience of 3 decades, unpopular.

In March, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) projected 15% growth in inheritance tax (IHT) receipts from £5.2bn in 2020/21 to £6bn for 2021/22. They projected this sum to rise to £7.1bn in IHT receipts in 2024/25, after allowing for indexation of the bands which had been due to start in April 2021.

Frozen IHT

FROZEN – LET IT GO?

As you know, (page 12 of our client magazine Spotlight) the Chancellor elected to freeze all allowances in the last Budget. At the time, due in part to lower house prices the reprojection was £1bn less by 2024/25. However, it is clear that house prices have continued to defy logic by rising.  If the rise in IHT receipts continue at the same rate as that experienced over April, May and June this year the 2021 total yield will likely exceed £6bn, rather more than anticipated (easy money eh?).

It’s always surprising that only around 25,000 estates bear IHT each year, but this year it could exceed 30,000. The nil rate bands (£325,0000) frozen until the end of 2025/26, then, unless values fall materially, this trajectory will continue.

And while on the subject of IHT, let’s not forget:

  • There are two Office of Tax Simplification (OTS) reports on IHT reform that have, substantially, not been acted upon by the Government
  • There have been a number of calls for wider reform of IHT from the likes of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Inheritance and Intergenerational Fairness.
  • A 2015 YouGov report found that IHT was the most disliked of all the personal taxes

If you are married (or are a widow/er), own your own home and have children, your nil rate band may well be £1m. However, if your estate is too large the additional main residence relief is reduced potentially to nothing.

If you are single and have no children, HMRC treat you as worthy of no favours, you have the standard nil rate band of £325,000 and no more.

SOLUTIONS? CLICK HERE!

Of course! there are solutions that may be helpful to you – so get in touch.

Dominic Thomas
Solomons IFA

You can read more articles about Pensions, Wealth Management, Retirement, Investments, Financial Planning and Estate Planning on my blog which gets updated every week. If you would like to talk to me about your personal wealth planning and how we can make you stay wealthier for longer then please get in touch by calling 08000 736 273 or email info@solomonsifa.co.uk

GET IN TOUCH

Solomon’s Independent Financial Advisers
The Old Mill Cobham Park Road, COBHAM Surrey, KT11 3NE

Email – info@solomonsifa.co.uk 
Call – 020 8542 8084

7 QUESTIONS, NO WAFFLE

Are we a good fit for you?

GET IN TOUCH

Solomon’s Independent Financial Advisers
The Old Mill Cobham Park Road, COBHAM Surrey, KT11 3NE

Email – info@solomonsifa.co.uk    Call – 020 8542 8084

7 QUESTIONS, NO WAFFLE

Are we a good fit for you?

INHERITANCE TAX IS EASY MONEY FOR HMRC2025-01-21T15:48:28+00:00
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