Originally posted by Lance
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Financial Spread betting, UK Tax, and HMRC. Advice please!
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I know a few folk who trade cfds with ig and others. Taxable. Maybe where the confusion camefrom.Originally posted by powerbook View PostLance, that link will be winging it’s way over to Crunch Accounting. On Friday they told me I must declare SB winnings on my SA. Which didn’t sound right to me. I did indeed search the Internet, however it wasn’t conclusive, hence I sought clarity from a forum.Comment
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then you know nothing about spread bettingOriginally posted by Nayab View PostIf I know anything about betting, it is this. House always wins.See You Next TuesdayComment
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Betting
My dad told me, way back when I was in short trousers that "You'll never see a skint bookie son" when I asked him about it.
I haven't either. I've also never ever been in a bookies to give my hard earned money away.Comment
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My wife has had to pay VAT on her 15,000 handbags so I beg to differ.Originally posted by stek View PostYou can't be taxed on wasting money!!The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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But that's not a waste of money, it's an essential.Originally posted by LondonManc View PostMy wife has had to pay VAT on her 15,000 handbags so I beg to differ.Comment
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I don't gamble (unless you count a brief period of financial spread-betting in the late nineties) but I was recently speaking to an immigrant with a partner with form for losing family money, and was going to tell her that gambling debts are not legally enforceable, an interesting anomaly of English law I had previously come across.Originally posted by malvolio View PostSo you've been betting for a while now and haven't figured out that gambling wins (and losses) are not liable for tax? Or even debt recovery? Hmmm...
Luckily I googled/checked, the position changed under the Gambling act 2005. Apparently gambling debts are now legally enforceable.Last edited by IR35 Avoider; 19 December 2016, 11:04.Comment
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