property tax
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Features
BLOG: Are you ready for Labour’s tax bombs?
Business sales broker, Adam Walker, looks at the potential changes to the tax landscape for the property sector should Labour win the election.
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Latest property news
Tory MP calls for Chancellor to consider single ‘property tax’ to stimulate market
John Stevenson says replacing Stamp Duty and Council Tax with a single annual property tax would free up hundreds of thousands of transactions.
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Features
Are Ltd companies really good for landlords?
Many of your landlords may be forming limited companies to manage their taxes, but, says Jonathan Amponsah at The Tax Guys, it’s not necessarily the right route for all.
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Housing Market
Scottish Government revises property tax after UK stamp duty changes
Deputy First Minister John Swinney has announced a series of changes to the Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) – which will replace stamp duty for homebuyers in Scotland – following Chancellor George Osborne’s amends to stamp duty in his Autumn Statement in December. Among the headline amendments, is the fact that homes in Scotland worth up to £145,000 will not now attract any tax, up from the previously proposed £135,000. For sales between £145,000 and £250,000, a tax rate of 2 per cent will be applied, with the introduction of a new rate of 5 per cent between £250,000 and £325,000. Mr Swinney had previously planned a tax rate of 10 per cent on residential properties sold for between £250,000 and £1 million – prompting concerns that those acquiring family homes could be hit. However, the 10 per cent rate will be applied to properties valued between £325,000 and £750,000. The top rate of 12 per cent – which was previously going to apply to residential properties worth in excess of £1 million – will now take effect from £750,000. The Deputy First Minister defended the Scottish national Party’s (SNP) decision to change the taxes following the Chancellor’s surprise…
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