| Inheritance
tax nil rate band
The inheritance tax nil rate band will increase
to £275,000 from 6 April 2005. The nil
rate bands have been set for the following two
years, at £285,000 for 2006/07 and £300,000
for 2007/08.
Capital
gains tax annual exemption
The annual capital gains tax exemption for individuals
will rise to £8,500 from 6 April 2005.
The maximum annual exemption for most trusts
will be £4,250.
Chargeable
gains – temporary non-residents
Individuals who leave the UK temporarily will
no longer be able to use the terms of any double
taxation agreement to escape tax on capital
gains arising while they are abroad. The change
will affect individuals who leave the UK after
5 April 2005 and some who leave between 16 March
and 5 April 2005.
Under current law, the chargeable
gains of individuals are normally subject to
tax if they are not resident and not ordinarily
resident in the UK for fewer than five tax years.
This is charged in the tax year of their return
to the UK. It has been argued that the terms
of the tax treaties of certain countries prevented
the Inland Revenue from taxing the gains of
individuals resident in those countries. The
Inland Revenue disputes this view, but the new
measure is intended to put the matter beyond
doubt. It also covers the position where individuals
are simultaneously resident in two countries.
Chargeable
gains – trustees’ change of residence
An anti-avoidance measure will prevent trustees
of settlements from exploiting the terms of
certain double taxation agreements to avoid
UK tax on chargeable gains. With effect from
16 March 2005, it will prevent the terms of
any tax treaty overriding UK capital gains tax
law, where the disposal is made in a tax year
in which the trustees are at some time resident
or ordinarily resident in the UK.
Chargeable
gains – location of assets
From 16 March 2005, changes are made to the
rules for determining where certain assets are
located for the purposes of tax on chargeable
gains. In particular, bearer shares in companies
incorporated in the UK will be treated as situated
in the UK, regardless of where the shares are
actually located. An intangible asset, such
as a contract or a right to sue, will be treated
as situated in the UK if it is subject to UK
law, unless its location is covered by existing
legislation.
The change will bring such
assets within the scope of capital gains tax
for individuals who are resident but not domiciled
in the UK, and who are therefore not generally
taxable on gains on assets located outside the
UK. It will also affect non-residents trading
in the UK through a branch, agency or permanent
establishment.
Stamp
duty land tax – residential
The threshold for stamp duty land tax on residential
transactions is raised from £60,000 to
£120,000 with effect from 17 March 2005.
Tax will be payable at 1% on the whole of the
consideration if it is more than £120,000
but not more than £250,000. There is no
change to the higher threshold of £150,000
for residential transactions in designated disadvantaged
areas. The other rates and bands are unchanged.
Stamp
duty land tax – commercial
Disadvantaged areas relief ends for non-residential
land transactions from 17 March 2005, unless
the contract was entered into before that date.
For relief to be preserved, there must be no
variation or assignment of the contract or sub-sale,
and the transaction must not be the exercise
of an option or pre-emption right.
Stamp
duty land tax disclosure rules
Rules have been introduced requiring the disclosure
to the Inland Revenue of information about schemes
and arrangements intended to avoid stamp duty
land tax on commercial property transactions
in the UK with a market value of at least £5
million. They are similar to the existing disclosure
rules for tax avoidance schemes involving employment
or certain financial products and will take
effect from 1 July 2005.
Stamp
duty land tax avoidance
New provisions block several stamp duty land
tax avoidance schemes. There will now be a charge
where land is transferred into a partnership
and the transferor takes money out of the partnership
within three years. Other changes affect the
claw-back of group relief, acquisition relief,
the grant of new leases where one party is a
bare trustee, certain variations of leases to
remove restrictive covenants, the withdrawal
of sub-sale relief where the second transaction
is also relieved from tax, the contingent consideration
rules and sale and leaseback transactions.
All the changes take effect
from 17 March 2005, except for transactions
in pursuance of contracts entered into before
that date, which are unaffected, subject to
certain conditions.
Stamp
duty land tax returns
The Inland Revenue valuation agencies will obtain
access to information on stamp duty land tax
returns with effect from Royal Assent.
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