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Reply to: House swap

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Previously on "House swap"

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  • threaded
    replied
    If you change your name and company name to quite long ones, the field in the normal database is only so wide, hence they have to handle your records specially, which basically means they will lose them more often.

    threaded in "imaginative ways to reduce the tax burden" mode

    Leave a comment:


  • PRC1964
    replied
    Originally posted by Rebecca Loos
    can you not "give" your house to someone else?
    and, completely unrelated of course, you get "given" a house by the people you just happen to have given a house to?
    Or is it a bit too obvious?
    Don't know about that. But you could change your name to theirs and get them to change to your name.

    It would certainly confuse the tax man.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rebecca Loos
    replied
    sorry DP I can't - we'll be taxed

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    I'll "give" you one Beccy if you "give" me one 1st.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rebecca Loos
    replied
    can you not "give" your house to someone else?
    and, completely unrelated of course, you get "given" a house by the people you just happen to have given a house to?
    Or is it a bit too obvious?

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    The best way round a house swap then is just leave ownerhip as it is.

    ....and wait for a new government.

    Leave a comment:


  • hyperD
    replied
    Originally posted by DimPrawn
    I wonder what other little tax tweaks go unnoticed by the great unwashed?
    Sadly all of them Mr Prawn as they don't pay any.

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    started a topic House swap

    House swap

    I was reading about the growing trend for people to swap homes rather than sell and buy another home. Added benefits were simple chain, no estate agent fees and no stamp duty (except on the difference in value between the houses).

    I see that the New Lie have changed the law on swapping properties and the full stamp duty is due on the full value of both houses.

    "After completion, you must send a Land Transaction Return to the Revenue and Customs Stamp Taxes Office providing details of the value of the house you have acquired.

    Previously, stamp duty was normally only payable on the amount of any balancing payment.

    If the difference in value of two exchanged properties was less than the lowest threshold for the payment of stamp duty, nothing was payable by either owner.

    However that all changed when the government introduced Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) in 2003.

    Now, only limited categories of exchanges of property are exempt from SDLT. An exchange between private individuals is not one of them. "

    Which was nice.


    I wonder what other little tax tweaks go unnoticed by the great unwashed?
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