Soldato
- Joined
- 4 Aug 2007
- Posts
- 22,593
- Location
- Wilds of suffolk
Suck it up - My stamp duty is £20K on £460K house that I am about to buy and there is talk of them changing it in future to house sellers pay stampduty - so when I come to sell it....
Thats actually been pretty much dismissed, but its an ever present risk that someone could implement.
I would actually prefer to see a buying and selling tax, half the current rate roughly, and only base it on the net cash amount of the deal. As opposed to simply a purchase tax.
If they did move to basing it on selling they could always give a credit for the amount paid on purchase for any properties bought pre tax change. This isn't hard to control due to relatively low amount of properties and the fact the amounts are already known to HMRC.
I actually prefer the taxation on sale as a theoretical tax, it also works to pick up the gain made on the house in a more equitable way than taxing on the purchase and then allowing any gains to be tax free. Its generally doing a better job of matching ability to pay against when the tax is paid, however in cases of distress such as a repo then it could increase conflict a bit more. Eg HMRC wanting its tax and the lender looking to recoup its money.
Thanks for making me look over it again anyway. They always seem to unnecessarily overcomplicate things with legal waffle. Based on the fact that initial rent and base figure will always be the same value, i don't know why they don't just put the calculation in as (250 * latest index value) / 224.5. It's almost like the legal profession are a bit lazy when it comes to outlining things that need calculating 