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This is fairly complex. The rate of tax paid by
individuals depends on whether they are a basic or higher rate taxpayer (the
threshold being £39,825 for the tax year to 5 April
2008).
It also depends on the length of time the asset has
been held. A capital gain is reduced by Taper Relief. There are two types of
Taper Relief, one for business assets and one for all other assets. For
business assets the gain is reduced by 50% for assets owned for over 12 months
and by 75% for assets held for over 24 months. For all other assets the gain
tapers by 5% for each full year of ownership from the third year to the tenth
year, eventually exempting 40% of the gain after the full decade of ownership
(i.e. for a higher rate taxpayer, each 5% taper of the gain reduces the rate of
tax by 2%).
Business assets most commonly held by Barnes Roffe
clients tend to be: shares in trading companies; interests in partnerships;
properties rented to trading businesses for use in their trade; and some AIM
shares. Note that the rules defining business assets for shares and property
changed in 2000 and 2004, so some assets have a mixed period of ownership where
they qualified as business and non-business assets. This makes the calculation
complicated.
Finally, for some assets held before March 1982,
you can calculate the gain by reference to the March 1982 value plus indexation
uplift (i.e. not the original cost). This will usually reduce the
gain. |