A CGT question: military exemption like PPR?
Monsoon
Registered Posts: 4,020 Beyond epic contributor 🧙♂️
I've found an interesting question.
Where a person serving in the military owns a house, never lives in it, rents it out and then sells it, is it subject to CGT? Assume they were in army accommodation for the duration.
I've been told that there is an exemption that exists, meaning they effectively get PPR due to them being in the army.
I have looked and looked and I can't find anything.
Has anyone heard of this?
Where a person serving in the military owns a house, never lives in it, rents it out and then sells it, is it subject to CGT? Assume they were in army accommodation for the duration.
I've been told that there is an exemption that exists, meaning they effectively get PPR due to them being in the army.
I have looked and looked and I can't find anything.
Has anyone heard of this?
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Comments
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Don't quote me on this but..
I believe a period of absence due to being stationed elsewhere in the military is an exempt period of ownership when doing the PPR calculation (just like final 3 years).
I don't believe it would extend to making a property exempt if it did not otherwise qualify for PPR (as it had never been the main residence).
Unless of course there is some other exemption that covers that scenario..0 -
Thanks Dean
The only thing I came up with was the job related acommodation one, whereby if you have to live in work accomm (and army counts as this), and you buy a property intending to live in it, but never actually do, it still counts as PPR, apparently, even if it's let out.
I just can't find anything actually relating to the armed forces, and I have run out of places to look (have tried Tolleys, HMRC Manuals, a variety of google searches).0 -
Ah I see.
I guess it just comes down to proving that 'intention'!0
