
There is usually no Capital Gains Tax (CGT) due on a property which has been used solely as the main family private residence. Conversely, an investment property which has never been used as a private residence will not qualify for relief. This relief from CGT is commonly known as private residence relief.
There are a number of issues taxpayers that own more than one home should be aware. An individual, married couple or civil partnership can only benefit from CGT on one property at a time. However, it is possible to choose which property benefits from a CGT exemption by making an election.
This must be done by nominating one property as your main home by writing to HMRC and specifying (with the full address) which home you want to nominate. All owners of the property must sign the letter. If you want to nominate a home you must do this within 2 years of any relevant change. You must have also lived in the house as your main or only residence at some point in the past.
There are special rules for overseas property and for non-UK residents. It is important to carefully consider the timing and frequency of changing an election.
If a property has been occupied at any time as an individual’s private residence, the last 9 months of ownership are disregarded for CGT purposes – even if the individual was not living in the property when it was sold.
Your UK residence status affects whether you need to pay tax in the UK on your foreign income.
Non-residents only pay tax on their UK income – they do not pay UK tax on their foreign income.
Residents normally pay UK tax on all their income, whether it’s from the UK or abroad. But there are special rules for UK residents whose permanent home (‘domicile’) is abroad.
In HMRC v M R Currell Ltd [2026] EWCA Civ 445, the Court of Appeal held that an £800,000 payment...
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has set itself an ambitious goal: by 2030, 90% of customer interactions should be digital,...
UK corporate law and HMRC guidance have long recognised that transactions between a company and its shareholders are subject to...
The UK Court of Appeal has clarified the VAT treatment of education grants, marking an important shift for schools, universities,...
Buying two or more homes together can trigger special stamp duty and property transaction tax rules across the UK. The...
Submitting a VAT return on time is one of the most important VAT responsibilities for UK businesses. A missed deadline...
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has adopted a significantly tougher stance on VAT investigations for large businesses recently. Investigations into...
From 1 May 2026, the UK VAT road fuel scale charges change to cover the period to 30 April 2027....
Two UK brothers were recently convicted for abusing the government’s film tax relief scheme. Between 2011 and 2015 they submitted...
In a 2026 tax appeal, the First-tier Tribunal (Tax) upheld HMRC’s view that a written-off director’s loan triggers an income...