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Creating a will

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    Creating a will

    I need to sort my will out, dont have one at the moments and have assets etc

    Got a few questions,

    1. I have a partner not married house is in joint names but we have a 'tenants in common agreement' sighned 60/40. Let say for the sake of a figure house is worth £700k, if she inherited from me my £420k 60% share would that incurr inheritance tax as it was over the freshold ? Concerned she would have to sell the place to cover tax bill.

    2. Do I need to put anything in the will about my ltd in case its still operational when I snuff it ?

    3. Who usually looks after a will, a solicitor, bank or do you just trust someone with it and hope they dont take a look?

    Cheers
    Last edited by Ivor1; 31 January 2007, 18:59.

    #2
    Originally posted by Ivor1
    Concerned she would have to sell the place to cover tax bill.
    This is not allowed. She would have to borrow the money. You cannot use portions of the estate to settle the tax due on it.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Ivor1
      I need to sort my will out, dont have one at the moments and have assets etc

      Got a few questions,


      2. Do I need to put anything in the will about my ltd in case its still operational when I snuff it ?

      Cheers
      I asked this in a previous thread..... http://forums.contractoruk.com/thread13690.html and received the answer.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Lucifer Box
        This is not allowed. She would have to borrow the money. You cannot use portions of the estate to settle the tax due on it.
        But when my grandad died and the house went into my nans name she didnt have to pay any inheritance tax. Thats what Im not clear on, the house sold for £317k, so lets assume a 50/50 split of £158.5k so under the fresh-hold, is it only if the other persons 50% is more than the threashold ?

        Comment


          #5
          There is no inheritance tax between spouces....


          Often used as a tax mitigation measure.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Ivor1
            But when my grandad died and the house went into my nans name she didnt have to pay any inheritance tax. Thats what Im not clear on, the house sold for £317k, so lets assume a 50/50 split of £158.5k so under the fresh-hold, is it only if the other persons 50% is more than the threashold ?
            The tax is due on the estate. In the situation you describe above it would not be incurred either due to free transfer between husband and wife or because they were joint tenants, or possibly some other reasons related to the particular circumstances.

            Currently the estate cannot be wound up until the bill is setlled and currently you cannot sell anything in the estate to settle the bill (although there are changes coming).

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by monkeyboy
              There is no inheritance tax between spouces....


              Often used as a tax mitigation measure.
              But it can be very ineffective because it can increase the tax on the second death by about 100k

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Ivor1
                I need to sort my will out, dont have one at the moments and have assets etc

                Got a few questions,

                1. I have a partner not married house is in joint names but we have a 'tenants in common agreement' sighned 60/40. Let say for the sake of a figure house is worth £700k, if she inherited from me my £420k 60% share would that incurr inheritance tax as it was over the freshold ? Concerned she would have to sell the place to cover tax bill.

                2. Do I need to put anything in the will about my ltd in case its still operational when I snuff it ?

                3. Who usually looks after a will, a solicitor, bank or do you just trust someone with it and hope they dont take a look?

                Cheers
                I would always suggest professional advice. It will end up saving you FAR in excess of what it costs you. I have the original of the will lodged with a solicitor (no charge for this) and have a copy for myself.

                Comment


                  #9
                  This thread had quite a bit of possibly relevant info and what appeared to be an expert in these matters chipping in.

                  http://forums.contractoruk.com/threadnav5541-3-10.html

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by rootsnall
                    This thread had quite a bit of possibly relevant info and what appeared to be an expert in these matters chipping in.

                    http://forums.contractoruk.com/threadnav5541-3-10.html
                    I've come in late on this but lets try and take it from the top although i appreciate that some of the points have alreay been answered.

                    Ivor1 on question 1. If you die without a will then your 60% share of the property goes to your estate, not your partner. If its over the 285K threshold then your estate is liable for the tax bill - could create loads of probs if the only asset was the property which needed to be sold to release funds to pay the bill, which can't be sold until the bill is sorted etc etc. Estates normally have to borrow to pay the bill. Also without a will you die "intestate" which is a much lengthier process than dying having made a will.
                    When your grandad died and the house went to your nan chances are it was held on a joint tenancy basis but even if that wasn't the case there would have been no IHT because of interspousal exemption, assuming they were married of course.
                    ASB is right - interspousal exemption is a very poor mitigation exercise. In fact it doesn't mitigate it, it just defers it till 2nd death and then you've lost the IHT allowance of the first who died which means you could be paying £114k didn't need to be paid.

                    Fun isn't it!!!

                    If you make a will and bequeath your share of the property to your partner then IHT is still payable as you are not married and don't benefit from "interspousal exemption". Plus, if its your intention that she gets your share of the house then you'd be better of owning it on a joint tenancy basis so that 100% ownership reverts to the survivor.

                    If your LTD has a value include it in the will. My experience is that solicitors are best placed to prepare wills but make sure they are a solicitor that specialises in this area and not a general solicitor - spent a lot of hrs unravelling poorly drafted wills.
                    Last edited by glashIFA@Paramount; 1 February 2007, 16:18.

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