Ed Colreavy
Partner
Article
29
The United Kingdom (UK) Finance Act 2015 received Royal Assent on 26 March 2015. This included final legislation for the introduction of a capital gains tax (CGT) charge on non-residents who dispose of UK residential property. The new charge applies to such disposals made on or after 6 April 2015.
In this note, we outline the Government's new rules for the taxation of "NRCGT gains" made by non-residents disposing of UK residential property and consider potential issues and planning considerations arising from the new tax.
The Government reviewed and took into consideration the responses it received to the consultations on the original proposals and the subsequent draft legislation published in December 2014. As a result, it has made a number of changes to the original proposals.
The new CGT charge on non-residents is focussed on "property used or suitable for use as a dwelling", i.e. a place that currently is, or has the potential to be, used as a residence. This includes property in the process of being constructed or adapted for such use, in line with the definition in the Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT), ATED and ATED-related CGT regimes. Disposals of building land are outside the scope of the charge, until a residential building is under construction.
A disposal of rights to acquire a UK residential property "off plan" before construction is treated as if it was a disposal of an interest in a completed property.
Residential property used for letting purposes is included in the charge, as would be the case for UK residents. In this way it differs from the ATED-related CGT charge which (among others) provides a relief for property let to third parties on a commercial basis.
There are exclusions for residential property with a communal use, such as boarding schools, residential accommodation for members of the Armed Forces, residential homes for children, nursing homes, etc. Purpose built (including converted) residential accommodation for students (including halls of residence, flats etc) with at least 15 bedrooms is excluded from the new CGT charge on non-residents provided it is occupied by students on more than half the days in the tax year. However, smaller establishments, such as family homes converted or otherwise let out to students are within the scope of the new charge.
A "closely held company" test has been introduced to limit the scope of the new charge to non-resident companies that are the private investment vehicles of individuals, families or small groups of individuals or families. This should ensure that the extension of CGT will not apply to disposals of UK property made by widely held or listed companies.
A "closely-held company" is defined in the legislation as one which is under the control of five or fewer participators, or one in which five or fewer participators together possess or are entitled to acquire, in appropriate circumstances, rights to the greater part of the company's assets on a winding up.
The legislation provides for a number of situations in which companies which otherwise would be regarded as closely-held are not to be so regarded. Amongst others, these include where it is only possible to do so by including as a participator a company which is itself a diversely-held company or "qualifying institutional investor" (QII).
A QII is a widely-marketed unit trust or open-ended investment company, the trustee or manager of a qualifying pension scheme, a company carrying on life assurance business or a person that is not liable to tax on grounds of sovereign immunity.
The definition of a QII may be amended by HM Treasury by regulations.
For protected cell companies, the test is applied to each cell or division of the company, rather than just at the level of the company.
Anti-avoidance provisions are also included to prevent arrangements which manipulate the control of a company at the time of a relevant disposal.
Despite many responses to the initial consultation suggesting that ATED-related CGT would effectively be redundant once the new CGT charge on non-UK residents was introduced and that it should be scrapped in favour of the new charge, the UK Government decided that the two charges target different issues and has retained the ATED-related CGT charge. It continues to apply at 28% rather than 20%, the rate applicable to companies under the new CGT charge.
To the extent a gain is ATED-related, ATED-related CGT applies in preference to the new charge. If any part of a gain post-6 April 2015 is not within ATED-related CGT (perhaps because the property was rented out for a period) that part of the gain will be potentially subject to the new CGT charge on non-residents.
Like the ATED-related CGT charge, the new CGT charge takes precedence over existing anti-avoidance provisions that attribute gains to UK resident members of non-resident companies.
Persons that are classed as "eligible persons" for the purpose of the new rules will be able to make a claim not to be chargeable to CGT on NRCGT gains. These include the following:
Under the rules prior to 6 April 2015, PPR (principal private residence relief) was available where a property was an individual's main residence (this included trust beneficiaries in appropriate circumstances).
The Government was concerned that, under the then existing terms of the relief, non-residents would have been able to make an election for their UK property to be their main residence for the purposes of PPR, and thereby avoid a CGT charge. Accordingly, to avoid this, a new rule has been introduced for properties located in a jurisdiction in which the individual is not tax resident.
This applies both to non-UK residents disposing of UK residential property and UK residents disposing of properties located outside the UK.
Under this rule, a residence is not eligible for PPR for a tax year unless:
A nomination of a property by a non-UK resident individual is not effective unless the individual meets the day count test for that tax year. If the day count test is not met the person is regarded as absent from the property for that tax year.
A day counts as a day spent by an individual (whether the person seeking to claim PPR or their spouse or civil partner) in a qualifying house for the purposes of the test if either the individual is present in the house at the end of the day (i.e. midnight), or is present for some part of the day and the next day has stayed overnight in the house. The second alternative avoids the requirement for presence in the property at exactly midnight which was a concern raised about earlier proposals.
Whilst occupation of a residence by one spouse or civil partner counts as occupation by the other, double-counting of days is not permitted.
PPR is available to trusts where a beneficiary meets the relevant criteria for residence or the day count test. This applies to both UK resident and non-resident trusts.
Subsidiary features of PPR, such as absence relief, lettings relief and final period relief, continue to be relevant. A transitional rule has been introduced in relation to absence relief for disposals by non-UK residents. Under this, if a period of absence began prior to 6 April 2015, that prior period of absence is deducted from the amount of absence available for periods after 6 April 2015.
For non-residents, a notice to treat a residence as their only or main residence is to be made at the time of disposal in the NRCGT return.
The rates of tax for the new CGT charge on non-residents are the same for non-UK resident individuals as for UK residents who pay CGT at their marginal rate of income tax.
So for taxpayers paying at basic rate, the rate is 18% and for those liable at higher/additional rate, it is 28%. For non-residents, the rate depends on their total UK income and gains. The annual exempt amount for gains (£11,100 for tax year 2015/16) is also available to non-residents.
For trustees, the rate is 28% and the annual exempt amount is available at half the rate for individuals.
The tax rate for companies is 20%, mirroring the rate paid by UK resident companies. Non-resident companies also have access to limited indexation allowance and group companies can enter into "pooling" arrangements to aggregate gains and losses on UK residential property across a group. There is a "de-pooling charge" for companies that leave a pooling arrangement.
The new rules do not apply to gains relating to periods prior to 6 April 2015. There are three options available, as follows:
With regard to changes in use, where there are consecutive changes in use, straight line time apportionment applies. For concurrent mixed use of property, the legislation provides for "a just and reasonable apportionment" to be made, which will be dependent on the facts of each individual case.
Losses on disposals of UK residential property are ring-fenced for use against gains on such properties arising to the same non-UK resident in the same tax year, or carried forward to later years.
If a person's residence status changes from non-UK resident to UK resident, unused UK residential property losses are transferable and available to be used as general losses against other chargeable gains.
Where a UK resident becomes a non-UK resident, he or she may transfer unused losses relating to UK residential property so that they are available to set against future UK residential property gains.
A non-UK resident disposing of UK residential property must file an "NRCGT return" with HMRC within 30 days of completion of the disposal to which the return relates. A single return is required where two or more disposals are made on the same day.
Generally, an NRCGT return must include an "advance self-assessment" of the amount that is notionally chargeable for the tax year, or additional amount if a previous NRCGT return for the year has been made. Payment of any tax due will be required on or before the relevant filing date.
However, such an assessment will not be required where the person is required to make a self-assessment return for the tax year in which the disposal takes place, or the previous year, or if they have made an ATED return for the previous period (i.e. the period up to the preceding 31 March).
A taxpayer may amend an NRCGT return within 12 months following the normal self-assessment filing date for the tax year in which the disposal is made.
An NRCGT return and, in appropriate cases a self-assessment return, will need to be filed where there is a loss, or no gain, or if any gains are made that are covered by the applicable annual exempt amount. A PPR nomination will also be made by way of the NRCGT return.
Subject to the application of a relief where available, the new CGT charge for non-residents disposing of UK residential property after 5 April 2015, catches gains on disposals of UK residential property of any value by individuals and most other closely-held entities not within the scope of ATED- related CGT.
The overall tax costs of holding a UK residential property for private use through a corporate envelope continues to be greater than doing so directly to the extent that higher rate SDLT, ATED and (at least for individuals taxable at 18% under the new CGT charge) ATED-related CGT may apply to an enveloped property.
However, the distinction between the respective tax costs of acquiring and owning high-value residential property through a company rather than directly has been reduced with the increase in the top rates of residential SDLT since December 2014.
While higher rate SDLT for properties over £500,000 acquired for private use through companies and certain other entities applies at 15% for the whole of the purchase price, at the higher end of the property market, even standard rates of SDLT are likely to result in a significant SDLT charge.
The fact that CGT potentially applies at rates of up to 28% to post-5 April 2015 gains on any disposal of UK residential property by a non-resident individual or trustee may further tip the balance back towards a corporate holding structure where there are other advantages to such a structure.
These might include the inheritance tax advantages of holding a property through an offshore company, possible privacy reasons and practical advantages, such as avoiding probate on the death of a property owner. Of course, careful consideration of all the relevant circumstances will be required to determine whether this may be the case.
It should also be borne in mind that the new rates of ATED which came into effect from 1 April 2015, are a significant increase from the previous rates. Over time, if these annual rates continue to rise significantly, they will begin to reinstate, and possibly widen, the previously substantial differential in tax cost between acquiring and holding residential property directly and through a corporate vehicle.
For more information about this subject, please contact the Private Capital team.
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