logo
We've found a leasehold flat to buy: Should the inflation-linked £500 ground rent put us off?

We've found a leasehold flat to buy: Should the inflation-linked £500 ground rent put us off?

Daily Mail​01-05-2025

My husband and I are house hunting and came across a great flat that we are really excited about, but there are a couple of concerns.
The flat, which is in a block of 18, is leasehold. The service charge is £2,400 a year and that includes bike storage, lift access, a communal roof terrace and buildings insurance.
That doesn't seem too bad, but could the costs escalate in the future?
Our biggest concern is the ground rent which is currently £500. There is a review period every 10 years at which point it will be increased in line with the Retail Price Index.
Could the fact that it is leasehold, with increasing ground rent and the fact it does not have any private outside space mean we may struggle to sell in the future?
Its asking price is £50,000 below what the previous owners paid for it in 2019 and that was when it was brand new. There are 119 years left on the lease.
Ed Magnus of This is Money replies: There is a lot of nervousness at the moment around buying leasehold.
This is translating into stunted price growth. Over the last five years, the average value of a flat has increased by 7 per cent, according to Zoopla. House values increased by 24 per cent during the same period.
People's desire for gardens during the pandemic contributed to this - but worries over leasehold, which is the tenure of the majority of flats, also played a big part.
At This is Money, we encounter reader after reader having issues with their leasehold home.
We have heard from someone who couldn't sell their leasehold flat because the freeholder was refusing to sign the paperwork, someone facing large costs to extend the lease, a person who felt their service charge was too high and wanted justice and someone with a ground rent that was set to double.
What costs come with a leasehold flat?
Most leaseholders, particularly those in purpose-built apartment blocks, will have a service charge to pay to the freeholder or management company.
This can include the costs of buildings insurance, cleaning, gardening, maintaining facilities such as lifts, bike lockers and communal areas, staffing a front desk if there is one, surveyors' fees, fire risk assessments and managing agents fees.
The average annual service charge bill for a flat in England and Wales hit £2,300 a year in 2024, an 11 per cent increase on the previous year, according to the estate agent Hamptons. This means the reader's service charge is just above the average.
Like our reader, many leaseholders also have to pay ground rent each year to the freeholder. This is a levy charged to reflect that leaseholders do not own the land their property is built on.
The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act banned ground rent being charged on new leases on homes purchased after 30 June 2022. However, it doesn't apply to existing leases, including those which are passed on from one owner to another when the property is sold.
Those with existing leases can now effectively reduce their ground rent to a peppercorn rent - essentially no ground rent at all - if they extend their lease through the formal route.
The average ground rent on existing leases ranges between £200 and £500 per annum, according to Tayntons Solicitors, so it sounds like our reader's ground rent is definitely on the high side.
Some leaseholders have found themselves trapped in homes with increasing ground rents - some which double every 10 years and others that increase in line with the Retail Price Index.
It's the ground rents that double every 10 years that are the biggest red flags and can make homes hard to sell or remortgage.
This is because costs can snowball from £500 to £1,000 to £2,000 to £4,000 to £8,000 over the next 50 years and so on.
Having ground rent that is linked to inflation should in theory be safer, but given the recent spike in inflation there is also reason to be concerned by this clause.
For expert advice, we spoke to Alero Orimoloye, advisor at Leasehold Advisory Service, Linz Darlington, managing director and founder of lease extension service Homehold, Gareth Belsham, director of Bloom Building Consultancy and Nigel Bishop, founder of buying agency Recoco Property Search.
Is the £2,400 service charge a red flag?
Gareth Belsham replies: On the face of it, a service charge of £2,400 a year - £200 per month - sounds reasonable given the list of things you get for it.
But a key question to ask the landlord is whether the service charge also includes a provision for future maintenance costs of the building.
Some service charges include an element which goes into a 'rainy day' fund - a 'sinking fund' in the lingo - which the landlord sets aside to cover the cost of redecorating or refurbishing communal areas like landings, as well as repairs to the building's fabric.
You need to find out if the service charge includes this element. If it doesn't, you and the other leaseholders could get a nasty shock if ever the building needed expensive repairs like a new roof.
In theory, each of you could be liable for one eighteenth of the cost, and given that a new roof might cost hundreds of thousands, this could leave you with a big bill.
Nigel Bishop adds: Service charges can actually also go down but are much more likely to surge over the years, which could create a substantial financial burden for homeowners.
There's no legal limit to how much service charges can increase. It depends on various factors such as inflation and subsequent price increases of service providers but also the age of the building.
The older the building, the more likely the need for repairs of communal spaces which in turn drives up service charges going forward.
It's therefore important to carry out research about the building, learn about reoccurring maintenance problems and determine when the service charge has last been updated.
Linz Darlington adds: I appreciate £2,400 doesn't sound unreasonable for the upkeep of a modern block and its communal space.
However, this could increase significantly. Unlike a house, you're unlikely to have control over what work gets done, which contractors do it, or how much it will cost.
Is the 119-year lease a concern?
Alero Orimoloye replies: With 119 years remaining, a lease extension isn't immediately necessary.
However, if you do extend, a statutory extension reduces ground rent to nil and adds 90 years, though the landlord can charge a premium as well as their legal fees.
Fortunately, proposed legal reforms are expected to make extensions cheaper and remove the need to pay the landlord's costs.
Nigel Bishop adds: Typically, mortgage lenders favour properties that have at least 125 years left on their lease.
Even if you did buy the property now, you might want to consider extending the lease after a few years which can be an expensive undertaking.
The lease extension premium very much depends on the level of ground rent, how much is left on the lease and how much the property might be worth after the lease extension.
As a general guideline, a lease extension would likely cost a minimum of £6,000 in addition to professional fees of £2,000 to £4,000.
That being said, the forthcoming changes in the law will allow leaseholders to buy the freehold which can be a solution but can also create administrative challenges for homeowners long-term.
Gareth Belsham adds: The 119 year lease sounds like an age, but in reality it's not that long in lease terms.
When a lease gets down to 80 years, leasehold properties can become more difficult to sell or mortgage. While this flat is still several decades away from that, the clock is ticking.
What about the £500 a year ground rent?
Alero Orimoloye replies: A ground rent of £500, increasing with RPI every 10 years, may reduce the property's value and make it harder to sell, unless future legislation offers a fair way to buy it out.
The £50,000 drop in value may reflect this impact. You can't change the rent terms unless you extend the lease.
Linz Darlington replies: The ground rent of £500 is a concern. If this represents more than 0.1 per cent of what you're paying for the property, it could make it hard to get a mortgage now or in the future.
Inflation has been rampant since the flat was leased and if it was reviewed today, I'd expect it to go up to around £700.
It's likely to rise again in four years.You have a right to extend your lease by 90 years and this also removes the ground rent – but the cost will be significant because the ground rent is so high.
How much will it cost to extend the lease and remove the ground rent?
Linz Darlington replies: Based on what you've said, a very rough estimate of the cost would be between £21,000 and £29,000, which includes the professional fees of both yourself and your freeholder.
You're right to be concerned about future value – a better bet would be a flat in a smaller building with a share of freehold.
Will this property be hard to sell in the future?
Nigel Bishop replies: It is almost impossible to answer at this stage as, besides the lease and ground rent, other factors will have to be taken into account.
Whether you will attract serious buyers when you put the property up for sale will depend on the wider economy at the time, the availability of mortgage products, the level of interest rates, general buyer interest but also the location of the property and your asking price.
Alero Orimoloye replies: Local estate agents can best advise on how the lack of outdoor space may affect the property's value.
Roof terrace access may add value, but since it's owned by the landlord, please be aware that they could build upwards in future.
This may affect your quiet enjoyment and increase service charges, especially if the building extension exceeds 18 metres due to added legal requirements.
Should they buy this property?
Gareth Belsham replies: I'm sorry to say that several of the issues you've identified here raise serious red flags for me.
Much as you both love the flat, buying the leasehold could expose you and your husband to several big risks.
Perhaps the biggest red flag of all is the length of the lease. This may be one of the reasons that the asking price of the flat is £50,000 less than what the first owner paid for it six years ago.
Granted, the first owner may have paid a new-build premium, and flats in many areas lost value during the pandemic, but I suspect the relative shortness of the lease is a factor in the low valuation.
If that's an issue now, it will be far worse when you come to sell. For this reason alone, I would advise you not to buy the flat. Or if you do go ahead, make sure you do so with your eyes wide open to the risks.
Sorry if you had your heart set on it, but take solace from the fact that this is a buyer's market.
In many areas, the number of homes for sale outnumbers the number of buyers, so there should be plenty of less risky options - with longer leases - to choose from.
Best mortgage rates and how to find them
Mortgage rates have risen substantially over recent years, meaning that those remortgaging or buying a home face higher costs.
That makes it even more important to search out the best possible rate for you and get good mortgage advice.
Quick mortgage finder links with This is Money's partner L&C
> Mortgage rates calculator
> Find the right mortgage for you
To help our readers find the best mortgage, This is Money has partnered with the UK's leading fee-free broker L&C.
This is Money and L&C's mortgage calculator can let you compare deals to see which ones suit your home's value and level of deposit.
You can compare fixed rate lengths, from two-year fixes, to five-year fixes and ten-year fixes.
If you're ready to find your next mortgage, why not use This is Money and L&C's online Mortgage Finder. It will search 1,000's of deals from more than 90 different lenders to discover the best deal for you.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I've been forced to sell my beloved caravan at a holiday park after Haven Holidays increased our rent by £5,000 - we only used it for ten weekends and I'm now £36,000 out of pocket
I've been forced to sell my beloved caravan at a holiday park after Haven Holidays increased our rent by £5,000 - we only used it for ten weekends and I'm now £36,000 out of pocket

Daily Mail​

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

I've been forced to sell my beloved caravan at a holiday park after Haven Holidays increased our rent by £5,000 - we only used it for ten weekends and I'm now £36,000 out of pocket

A grandfather has been left £36,000 out of pocket and forced to sell his holiday home in Somerset after the ground rent was increased by £5,000. Christopher Jeff and his wife, Ida, thought snapping up a caravan using a chunk of their pension would provide a lifetime of happy memories. But the couple were faced with a tough ultimatum; sell at a loss or continue drowning in mounting annual fees. The first year's ground rent was £3,127 - which they didn't realise was only a partial payment - and it has since increased to £8,161 which is more than half the cost of the entire caravan. It's left the retired couple at least £36,000 out of pocket. 'Being unable to pay the ground rent this year, we are in the position of needing to sell the caravan,' Christopher, from Bedworth, told Luxury Travel Daily. 'It's just too expensive to own one of these units. We have only holidayed in it for ten long weekends.' The former lorry driver first visited Haven Holidays' beachfront park, Doniford Bay, 13 years ago. They then returned with their grandson and out of curiosity, Christopher asked how much it'd be to own a caravan at the site before spending £14,859 on the secondhand holiday home. The grandad said: 'We knew we couldn't afford a brand new caravan, but we found what we thought was a nice one that was a bit older. 'I had to cash in a good chunk of my pension to pay for the caravan. I thought it would be worth it for some family holidays away from the rat race. 'We were told that we would be able to resell it back to the park, or we could resell it privately but pay the park 15 per cent. 'We had no intentions of reselling at that point, we wanted the holidays. What we didn't realise was how much all the other costs were going to be.' The couple forked out on a new microwave, fridge freezer and bedding, totalling £5,000. They claim to have been 'encouraged' to also pay out for new decking, costing £4,500, as well as a storage box, £300, and a bench for £120. A MailOnline graphic detailing the hidden costs of owning a static home (pictured) To cover the mounting annual costs, the Haven salesperson allegedly told the couple that they could rent out the holiday home privately. But to do so, they'd need to have someone staying in it every single week of the season for £450, including passes. He said: 'If we were using it some weeks ourselves, we would have to charge even more than that. 'Haven were undercutting us by renting their own caravans cheaper all season long - sometimes £150 for a week in the off-season. 'We managed to rent out for a few weeks [last year] - five in total - but my wife, Ida, is still working in sales and all of her commission was used up covering the shortfall in rent. 'Also the park is closed for three months. 'That's a quarter of the year we can't even advertise it for rent.' Christopher and Ida have tried to sell the caravan back to Haven, though they claim to have been told they have 'too much stock already and couldn't make an offer' unless they upgraded to a more expensive unit. The best offer they've had so far privately is £3,000 and with the added 15 per cent commission to pay the park on any private sales, they're looking at a gut-wrenching £12,450 loss. He added: 'Even that offer fell through due to the costs involved. 'Nobody wants to buy a caravan and take on the commitment of paying over £8,000 for nine months of caravan access. 'Especially when you can't rent it out and break even because it's cheaper for guests to go directly through Haven.' European Consumer Claims has been called in to help get the couple's money back. Greg Wilson, CEO, said: 'When we first started looking into holiday park consumer abuse, we were aware that there were issues. 'However, the sheer scale of wrongdoing was shocking, even to us.'

What is life like in Scotland's most 'popular affordable town'?
What is life like in Scotland's most 'popular affordable town'?

The Herald Scotland

time2 days ago

  • The Herald Scotland

What is life like in Scotland's most 'popular affordable town'?

Earlier that afternoon, around two and a half miles away in the Macedonia area, Scott Hume is drinking tea in the sunshine outside of his new, temporary flat. Dandelion clocks the size of baseballs rise up from the unkept garden in front of the brutalist concrete cube of the council property. The retired army veteran, 59, narrowly escaped placement in a homeless hostel by the council. It came down to the wire, but a veteran's charity stepped in at the last minute. They helped him secure the temporary council flat in three hours, he tells me. He moved in last night. The idea that Glenrothes is the 'most popular affordable town for families' is a lie, Hume claims, his tone indignant. 'This is a bad place to try and get accommodation.' Welcome to Glenrothes (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Scott Hume in his rented accommodation (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) The affordable tag was placed on the town in the heart of Fife by Zoopla in early May. The property website measured affordability by looking at the ratio of average three-bed house prices in locations across the UK, compared with average earnings in the local authority area. The popularity ranking was based on the average number of Zoopla listing views for a typical three-bed home in each area, with the research based on the first quarter of 2025. Glenrothes topped the list (which was dominated by Scotland and Wales) with the average price of a three-bedroom home listed as £136,900 and the house-price-to-earnings ratio at 1.8. Wishaw, in North Lanarkshire, was second in Scotland and fifth on the list with £168,600 for the average three-bed and an earnings ratio of 2.1. Leven, a seaside town in Fife where a three-bed is £164,600 on average, came in at third for Scotland (eighth in Britain) with an earnings ratio of 2.1. 'The willingness of many to consider different regions or compromise on property features further highlights the adaptive strategies families are employing in today's market,' said Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla. READ MORE: Glenrothes 'UK's most popular location for family house-hunters' Glenrothes is within commuting distance of several Scottish cities. It's just over 30 miles to Edinburgh, and a train from nearby Markinch Station will get you into the capital in just under an hour. By car, you can commute to Glasgow in about an hour, Perth in 40 minutes and Dundee, about 35 minutes. Family house hunters and first-time buyers from the city might migrate to a commuter town like this, where they can stretch their deposit further and get more space for a growing brood. 'We came from Kirkcaldy, but we liked this area better than some other areas,' Mounsey says. 'It's quieter and it's very handy to everywhere.' The commute from Glenrothes to Edinburgh Airport, where she works, is only around 40 minutes, she adds. Basically, the same time it took from Kirkcaldy with traffic. Mounsey's fiancé is training to be a police officer. They don't know where he will be stationed yet, but the ease of access to the motorway means they do not have to worry too much about it. 'We would like something bigger, maybe when we do start a family,' she says. 'Maybe just a slightly bigger garden, but we're not fussed about leaving here.' 'In Glenrothes, you get a lot more for your money than in cities,' explains Dylan Kimmet, a local property partner at Purple Bricks. 'You'll get more garden space, a bit more room. I think overall it's quite a nice place to live. It's got a really good community vibe and a lot of people know each other on a community level.' Kayla Mounsey in her Bellway home (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Bellway advertisements (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) A general view of Glenrothes (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Glenrothes was Scotland's second new town (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Glenrothes was designated as one of Scotland's first post-war new towns in 1948, with most of its housing built by the Glenrothes Development Corporation and later managed by Fife Council. From the 1950s through the 1970s, large council estates were built in areas like Auchmuty, Macedonia, Pitteuchar, and Collydean, their curved roads complemented by the clean lines and flat roofs of modernist housing. At the time, renting your house from the council was commonplace. But by the 1980s, the attitude towards council housing shifted. Margaret Thatcher's Right to Buy scheme, founded on the idealisation of home ownership and the ideological idea that it would shrink the need for social housing, forever changed the make-up of towns like Glenrothes. As in many other places, it created a two-tier housing market that separated new homeowners with equity and renters grappling with a dwindling supply of housing options within their means. Now, 10 years on from when the SNP ended the Right to Buy scheme, its legacy still haunts those who were left behind. The affordability touted by Zoopla's figures makes sense on paper, but when I put this to people in Glenrothes, many asked, affordable to whom? Inside his new temporary flat, veteran Scott Hume explains he has been struggling to access accommodation in the town since the breakdown of his relationship during the pandemic. His things are piled around him, brought over from his former flat with the help of the Armed Forces charity SSAFA. Hume retired from the army in 1996 but has kept close links with the Services. Scott Hume has kept close links to the army after retiring (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) A playful grin flashes across his face when his satirical t-shirt is pointed out (it reads, 'Royal Engineer (Rtd) – responsible adult supervision is required at all times.'). He's a proud man, but the distress of coming so close to being placed in a homeless hostel is ever-present behind his eyes when we speak. Last February, Hume fell off a roof. The accident left him with a disability, unable to work and with new accessibility requirements for accommodation. 'Being out of work destroyed me,' he says. But his journey through the housing system started four years prior, this is just the latest knock in his quest to find a home. When Hume first reached out to the council for help with accommodation, he says he was advised to secure a private let and told the waitlist was 'about 16 months'. As part of Fife Council's Covenant Commitment, the local authority allocates a minimum of 40 properties annually to Armed Forces personnel. But this is 'ideally at the point when they leave the forces,' according to Gavin Smith, Fife Council's access service manager. Hume says: 'After 16 months, I inquired about it and [they] said, 'you're not on the list, you've got a roof over your head'. So, I was stuck then,' he says. His private rental was around £500, and Hume enjoyed a good relationship with his landlord. But a few years after he moved in, Hume's landlord broke the news that she had to sell the flat so she could retire. She gave him as much notice as she could, around 15 months. The last time he had to look for a flat, Hume says there were 'hundreds' on the private market. 'Now you're lucky if there's a couple.' And the rents have jumped from £500 per month to between £750 and £850 for a flat the same size. 'That's not affordable,' he adds. Glenrothes is close to Scotland's major cities (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) He and his landlord have been navigating the Scottish Government's eviction process since. Landlords must go to the First-tier Tribunal to legally evict a tenant, and the whole process can take weeks or months. But councils do not treat someone as 'homeless' until they are formally evicted, leaving vulnerable people like Hume in limbo. 'How long is temporary? Not knowing is worse than anything,' he says. He claims the temporary council flat is costing £623 a fortnight, £1246 per month. "The council's rent policy is reviewed annually, but the costs of temporary accommodation are higher than standard council rents,' says Smith. 'Where households have no choice but to enter temporary accommodation, we'll make arrangements with them to pay what they can afford based on an income and expenditure calculation. We always try to ensure that people aren't negatively financially impacted because of homelessness and charges.' Hume's landlord, who didn't want to be named, says the decision to sell up was not one taken lightly. The stress of making someone homeless is clearly eating her up. 'It's not as stressful as the risk of being homeless, obviously,' she says firmly. I ask her what she thinks has been the biggest contributor to the housing crisis. 'Right to Buy,' she replies quickly, acknowledging that is how she came to own two properties in the area. 'If you look online at what's to rent in Glenrothes for the price, they're like pigsties,' she says. 'It may be, in comparison to the rest of Scotland, a relatively so-called 'cheap place to live', but I would say rents are quite high for the standard of the properties.' 'Glenrothes is by no means a mecca for getting a house,' she adds. Glenrothes (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Kayla Mounsey with her dog (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) 'When the Right to Buy came on the scene, it allowed people who had council homes to buy them at a heavily discounted rate,' explains Dr Kim McKee, a professor of housing and social policy at the University of Stirling. 'But the issue was that we never really replaced these homes. We lost tens of thousands of homes in the social rented sector in Scotland, but we've not replaced them.' Mortgages became more affordable during that period, and home ownership boomed. But in the last 20 years, Dr McKee says, the private rented sector has grown exponentially. 'If you look back 20 years ago, the private rented sector was mostly for students, and perhaps migrants and professionals who had to move around for their jobs. But that's not the case now. 'It's now housing a really wide cross section of society, with one in seven households in the private rented sector, and that's one of the real difficulties. The affordability of rent is very different between social and private, but you also have different housing rights in terms of security of tenure as well. It's very difficult for people.' The three leading contributors to the current housing crisis are fallout from the Right to Buy scheme, a broken allocation system for social housing, and a lack of investment in new council houses. 'In the 1980s, it was pretty common to rent from a social landlord,' Dr McKee explains. 'Big urban centres house a lot of the population, but now it's more difficult to access social housing if you're not coming through the homeless system. If you're applying for a general waiting list, you can wait a very, very long time.' 'It's very difficult for people, they're stuck,' she adds. 'They're languishing on temporary accommodation lists and often the only option they have is to rent privately, which obviously, budget-wise, can be more expensive for them than renting from a social landlord would be.' Those who do not have the means to save for a deposit are shut out of the housing market. Bad credit, precarious work, disability and rising rents can make climbing the property ladder inaccessible to many. Wider shifts in the economy related to the cost of living crisis (rising energy bills, inflation, surging cost of food) have also contributed to the trade-offs young families are making to stretch their budgets. Hence, the uptick in first-time house hunters seeking out communities like Glenrothes. Peter Gulline, 59, moved to Glenrothes aged 13. The Conservative politician was elected councillor of the Glenrothes North, Leslie and Markinch Ward in 2022. He says wherever new housing estates are built, the properties are always 'gobbled up'. A lot of the market is people in Glenrothes moving to another property, he claims. The current strain on services is temporary. 'We just have to get through this hiccup of everything being really, really busy and weather the storm,' he says. The private rental market has also 'gone through the roof', but councillor Gulline does not see that as a 'bad thing'. He does not agree that the Right to Buy scheme has contributed to the housing crisis. 'People say we've lost 40,000 houses because they were sold off,' he says. 'Well, actually, we haven't lost 40,000 houses. We've lost the responsibility of having to maintain 40,000 houses, but they are still houses. 'There is still somebody living in them. They've not been bought, bulldozed and replaced with a car park.' He describes the wait for social housing as a game of snakes and ladders when I ask about the backlog for council homes. 'Everybody thinks there's a list. And the list has got 17,000 people on it,' he says. 'There are actually multiple lists.' He rattles off some of the categories: homelessness, disability, domestic abuse, and prison leavers. 'It's not a list that you just crawl up. It's a list you can move up and get knocked down a couple of pegs if people come along that had more justification.' Marissa MacWhirter in a Glenrothes park (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) The town is known for its public art (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) As far as Gulline is concerned, 'Glenrothes is a fantastic town for families.' It's easy to navigate, it has plenty of decent schools, there are lots of parks and green space, and clubs and activities for the young and old. The administrative capital of Fife, the town also boasts the largest shopping centre in the council area (Kingdom Shopping Centre) and decent transport links from the bus station. The number of outdoor artworks dotted around town, the carefully landscaped roundabouts, and the spring flowers blooming from every public space give Glenrothes a wholesome community feeling, even for those just passing through. The town, like many in Scotland, is caught between two narratives. Its affordability gives many the chance to get on the housing ladder and provides young families with a safe, quiet community in which to raise children. But the housing crisis has made the security of home ownership increasingly out of reach for many. Fife Council acknowledges the 'extreme pressure' it's under to meet housing needs in the crisis. The local authority has created the Fife Housing Register, a shared list providing a single access route to available homes, in partnership with local housing associations. "We're actively reducing waiting times for those assessed as statutorily homeless as part of our short-term housing emergency response, though challenges remain, especially for larger families and those with specific health or disability needs,' says the authority's housing access service manager. 'Precise information about housing prospects is difficult to provide. We understand the uncertainty this creates and remain committed to supporting applicants through the process." I ask Hume how he feels about his new temporary accommodation. 'I've got no storage, but it's better than a hostel,' he sighs. Marissa MacWhirter is a columnist and feature writer at The Herald, and the editor of The Glasgow Wrap. The newsletter is curated between 5-7am each morning, bringing the best of local news to your inbox each morning without ads, clickbait, or hyperbole. Oh, and it's free. She can be found on X @marissaamayy1

Can we gift our daughter three of the bedrooms in our house to lower inheritance tax bill?
Can we gift our daughter three of the bedrooms in our house to lower inheritance tax bill?

Daily Mail​

time3 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Can we gift our daughter three of the bedrooms in our house to lower inheritance tax bill?

Inheritance tax is a minefield for us. We do not want to leave our daughter with a big tax bill after we die, but our house may be worth £1million in 20 years. We have been advised to make a trust under Section 102. We've also been told to give our daughter three of our bedrooms, then if the last person survives seven years the house will not be included in IHT. This is because it will already be registered with the Government, and she will only have to deal with probate on the remaining funds. The cost would be north of £5,000. I'm not clued up about this, so can this be set up so that the last person to die be after seven years? For example, I could die tomorrow but my wife could live over seven years. Any advice welcome. Angharad Carrick of This Is Money says: Inheritance tax (IHT) is a thorny issue and I understand why you and your wife do not want to leave your daughter with a huge tax bill. Frozen thresholds combined with rising asset prices, including the value of homes, investments and savings, are already dragging more people into the IHT net. IHT is levied at 40 per cent on estates above a certain size. As an individual, your estate needs to be worth more than £325,000 for your loved ones to have to pay IHT. This can be doubled to £650,000, jointly, for married couples or civil partners, who have not already used up any of their individual allowances. A further crucial allowance, the residence nil rate band, increases the threshold by £175,000 each for those who leave their home to direct descendants. This gives a total potential extra boost of £350,000 and creates a potential maximum joint inheritance tax-free total of £1million. Changes to the rules in 2027 will also bring pension pots into people's estates, which will only add to the numbers due to pay death duties. This Is Money recently revealed how this change will add thousands to some families' tax bill. There are several ways to mitigate the tax's impact, but the rules are complex. We asked some tax experts for some general thoughts on using a trust for IHT and whether it's possible to gift your daughter part of your property. What is a trust for IHT purposes? Natalie Butt, Director, Private Clients at Crowe, says: A trust is a mechanism whereby an individual can move assets out of their estate. To get relief from IHT, an individual would need to a) give the asset away and retain no benefit, and b) survive 7 years from the gift. When an individual gifts any asset into a Trust, this is a lifetime chargeable transfer and is subject to an immediate charge to IHT – on the basis that the individual has not settled Trusts in the preceding 7 years, they would have the first £325,000 at 0 per cent and the balance above at 20 per cent. Generally, if the settlor survives for 7 years after making a gift to a Trust and has no benefit, it will fall outside of their estate. Trusts come with both legal and taxation reporting requirements, including registration on the Trust registration service, which is managed by HMRC. Trusts are often irrevocable and should not be entered into without due care and attention. For IHT purposes, when a married couple, or couple in a civil partnership, put assets jointly into a Trust, they are deemed to have both made the gift on the percentage of what they bring to the table. For example, if a rental property was owned tenants in common with a 60/40 split, then the total value would be apportioned. If one of the couple were to die within the 7 years, then their gift will fall back into their estate. Can I gift bedrooms to lower the tax bill? Rachael Griffin, tax and financial planning expert at Quilter says: At the heart of this is a concept known as the 'seven-year rule'. If you give something away like a share in your property, and survive for seven years, then that gift is generally outside your estate for IHT purposes. But there's a key catch you can't still benefit from what you've given away. This is known as a 'gift with reservation of benefit' (GWR), and it means if you keep living in the house rent-free after giving it away, HMRC will treat it as still being part of your estate, and tax it accordingly. That's where Section 102 of the Finance Act 1986 comes in. It outlines the GWR rules and is designed to stop people dodging IHT while continuing to enjoy the benefit of the gifted asset. Simply giving your daughter three bedrooms, while you and your wife carry on living in the house, would fall foul of these rules even if one of you survives another seven years. Some people try to mitigate this by paying market rent to the person they've gifted the house to but that's often impractical, especially when the beneficiary is a close family member like a child. HMRC expects it to be properly documented and paid consistently. Butt says: It is very difficult to give away your family home and continue to live there. One option an individual may consider to help ease the impact of IHT is to take out a life assurance insure the tax. This policy could be written into Trust and be accessible straight away on death. It should be outside the scope of IHT and enable the beneficiaries to pay the tax. If that is not an option due to age, some individuals are considering lifetime mortgages and using the cash borrowed against the property to gift to children. The alternative is for the parents to pay market rate rent to their children for the gift to be IHT effective. This technique though depletes cash savings and means the children have a reporting obligation to HMRC for the rent received and creates an income tax charge for them, so this is probably seen as a last resort. It would be advisable for individuals considering their options to seek professional advice. Please note, we cannot give tax advice in isolation – we need to know the full picture of any clients' needs. However, we can provide general pointers that should not be relied on. Is there anything I can do to lower the IHT bill? Griffin says: The good news is that if your daughter is your direct descendant and the house is your main residence, then each of you currently has a £175,000 residence nil-rate band in addition to your £325,000 standard nil-rate band. That means, as a couple, you could potentially pass on £1million tax-free — as long as your estate meets the criteria and doesn't breach the £2million taper threshold. If those allowances remain in place and your only significant asset is your home, your daughter might not face an IHT bill at all. But of course, tax rules can and do change. It's also important to consider your own financial needs. Gifting away your home or locking it into a trust could limit your options later in life, particularly if you need to fund care or downsize. Probate may still be required, even if IHT isn't due, and it can come with administrative and legal costs. Getting clear advice from a financial planner or solicitor with estate planning expertise is a wise next step. In short, be cautious about complex gifting arrangements, especially if you're still living in the property.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store