I think that there may be a mistake here: "Any self-respecting property owner is familiar with the 'never sell' strategy. On paper it makes perfect sense - Capital Gains Tax (CGT) is never paid because you never realise the gains and CGT is waived upon death. And Inheritance Tax (IHT) is paid on the net value of the estate not capital gains so if the property portfolio is signed over to your children more than seven years prior to death this too will avoid tax." But - if you transfer assets prior to death then CGT is liable at transfer. The idea I suggested in my original post of Oct 29th was to release capital and transfer that - not the portfolio itself. How does the advice in the article change if it is released equity passed to children/grandchildren not property itself?
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Currency Solutions are the recommended currency exchange provider for Property Secrets members.
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