Capital Gains Tax

15 articles found

Capital Gains Tax on property disposals is one of the most complex areas of UK property investment. Our guides cover CGT rates, reliefs, allowances, and the 60-day reporting window.

Labour leadership candidates are proposing CGT alignment with income tax and new council tax levies on overseas high-value property owners, which Knight Frank warns could compound landlord exits, suppress international investment, and keep mortgage rates elevated — with prime central London already showing measurable price and transaction pressure.

Tags: Capital Gains Tax, Tax, Buy-to-Let, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Stamp Duty, Mortgages, EPC / Energy Efficiency, Market Trends
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Knight Frank's UK residential research head assesses a cluster of emerging policy risks — CGT alignment, council tax surcharges on high-value properties, and bond market pressures — alongside data showing prime central London transactions 18% below average and prices 22% off peak. The article signals higher-for-longer mortgage rates and potential further landlord exit triggers.

Tags: Capital Gains Tax, Stamp Duty, Tax, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Market Trends, Mortgages, EPC / Energy Efficiency
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Rising UK gilt yields — now above 5% for the first time since 2008 — driven by inflation fears and Labour political uncertainty are feeding directly into mortgage pricing, prompting Knight Frank to downgrade house price forecasts across all UK markets. Investors face a near-term decision window on whether to act before borrowing costs rise further.

Tags: Mortgages, Market Trends, Tax, Refinancing, Capital Gains Tax
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UK buy-to-let landlords face a compounding regulatory and financial squeeze — from Section 24, S21 abolition, SDLT surcharges, and EPC targets — accelerating portfolio exits and tightening supply. Simultaneously, an emerging trend of wealthier older homeowners choosing to rent rather than downsize could reshape rental demand demographics.

Tags: Buy-to-Let, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Section 21, Section 24, Stamp Duty, Capital Gains Tax, EPC / Energy Efficiency, HMO, Market Trends, Tax
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UK buy-to-let landlords are exiting the private rental sector at an accelerating pace due to compounding regulatory burdens and weakening returns, while an emerging cohort of asset-rich older renters may simultaneously increase rental demand, tightening supply further.

Tags: Buy-to-Let, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Section 21, Section 24, Stamp Duty, EPC / Energy Efficiency, Tax, Market Trends, Capital Gains Tax
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A senior estate agent argues the UK's BTL sector is in structural retreat under cumulative regulatory and tax pressure, while simultaneously identifying a growing cohort of wealthy older renters who may rationally prefer renting over ownership — potentially reshaping both supply and demand in the PRS.

Tags: Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Section 21, Section 24, Buy-to-Let, Tax, Stamp Duty, Capital Gains Tax, EPC / Energy Efficiency, HMO, Market Trends
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HMRC has increased referrals to the Valuation Office Agency by 23.5% in the past year, signalling a more aggressive enforcement posture on IHT property valuations. Investors with significant residential portfolios face elevated risk of valuation challenges, additional tax liability, and personal executor exposure if valuations are not RICS-certified.

Tags: Tax, Regulations & Compliance, Capital Gains Tax, Legal
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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the CGT rate on property sales in 2024-25?
Residential property disposals are taxed at 18% for basic-rate taxpayers and 24% for higher-rate taxpayers (from 30 October 2024). The annual exempt amount is £3,000 for 2024-25.
How long do I have to report capital gains on property?
You must report and pay CGT on UK residential property disposals within 60 days of completion. Late reporting attracts penalties even if no tax is due.
Can I offset renovation costs against capital gains tax?
Yes, enhancement expenditure (capital improvements that add value, not repairs) can be deducted from the gain. Examples include extensions, loft conversions, and new kitchens — but not like-for-like replacements or maintenance.