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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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So with the sale of a house, cars, contents of bank accounts etc, it's not actually that high a threshold. It applies to an estate, not a cash sum. All possessions.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:39, 2 replies, latest was 14 years ago)
if your parents have less than that to leave, surprise surprise, you are much more likely to be all for IHT. would you still feel like that if your parents had worked hard to leave you, say, £2,000,000 and suddenly the government wanted to take £1,800,000 of it? and ditto, you are much more likely to be in favour of clinging onto your family money if you actually have any!
this is why i think a lot of people's politics is about self-interest.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:40, Reply)
So you can get about 3 houses at the uk average price inherited before you pay any tax. Then you pay 40% on the 4th and 5th houses you get given for free.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:41, Reply)
One person dies. The other person doesn't pay inheritance tax because they hold their assets as joint owners.
For the 650k threshold to apply, they'd have to die together. Or am I wrong, here?
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:45, Reply)
married partners don't pay any of the tax, and their £350k allowance is passed over to the surviving member.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:46, Reply)
House prices currently being what they are though, even 650k is still well within middle class territory. My parents own two houses, one of which they rent out. Combined they own half a million pounds-worth of property and they are not unusual in this country.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:48, Reply)
they would only be taxed 14% which is less than VAT, and all costs of sale etc are tax deductable so it would be less.
It's really not an unreasonable tax, it's just sold as one by the very rich.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:52, Reply)
We're talking about her gay ex-boyfriend's proposal of 90%
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:54, Reply)
but I'm willing to be proved wrong, here.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 14:00, Reply)
There always used to be massive restrictions on this, I didn't realise the rules had changed. Useful info, cheers.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 14:16, Reply)
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:45, Reply)
you stitch it up with a complex series of trusts and you can avoid paying most of it.
the people who oppose this kind of tactic are generally the people who don't have much to inherit OR don't have kids to leave it to, imho. but am happy to be proven wrong.
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:46, Reply)
have decided that this is AN OUTRAGE and managed to get the public to think it's a totally unreasonable DEATH TAX
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:47, Reply)
I'm morally aghast for no reason
(, Wed 25 Apr 2012, 13:51, Reply)
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