Significant CGT changes affecting UK residents hidden in Government plans to tax non residents
In responding to HMRC’s plans to extend capital gains tax (CGT) to non-residents in certain circumstances, the Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT) has voiced concern over the proposed withdrawal of the principal residence election for all taxpayers. The Institute believes that the proposal may have a significant impact on UK residents with more than one property.
The proposed changes were originally mooted in the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement last year as a way to improve fairness in the UK tax system. The Government plans to extend CGT to non-residents when they sell their UK residential property. Non-residents will be able to claim principal private residence (PPR) relief but to ensure that this relief does not undermine the proposals the Government intends to withdraw the ability of any one with more than one residential property, including UK residents, to choose his or her main residence by election, leaving it to HMRC to determine, based upon demonstrable evidence, which of the owner’s properties is his or her main residence.
Stephen Coleclough, CIOT President commented: “The withdrawal of the principal private residence election is a much wider issue, affecting many UK residents with two homes, not just non-UK residents with residential property here. This is for a good reason – many people live in one place for work during the week and another during the weekends and holidays, often meaning the lines are blurred as to which is the person’s or their family’s primary residence. If the plans were to go ahead, then UK residents could be faced with CGT charges on their first or second properties, with no certainty as to which is which.
“If the Government wants to change the principal private residence election, or the rule generally, there should be a free standing consultation on that issue. There may be perfectly good reasons why they do want to change – we have recently seen evidence of MP’s using the rules to flip their principal private residence repeatedly.
“Changes to how primary residency is decided should not be hidden behind an obscure consultation, aimed at bringing a narrow group of non-residents in to the charge. These points should be considered in an open and grown up manner, and we urge the Government to think again on this issue.”