Question:
My mother recently passed away and has left me her house, which is valued at £400,000. I understand her nil-rate band for inheritance tax (IHT) is £325,000 so I'm liable for 40% of £75,000 for IHT. She had no other assets. I have lived with her in this house for eleven years, and eight years ago I paid for a £80,000 two-storey extension. Is it possible for me to deduct this £80,000 amount from the value of the house for IHT purposes?
Arthur Weller replies: In essence, what you are claiming is that although the house was entirely in your mother's name, she was the 100% legal owner, nevertheless you owned (at least) 20% of the beneficial ownership of the property, by virtue of the fact that you paid for it, and jointly occupied the property together with your mother. If you look at
www.gov.uk/hmrc-internal-manuals/capital-gains-manual/cg70230 you can see that according to the criteria listed there you have a good argument. I would advise you to do as you have written (deduct the £80,000), but explain to HMRC what you are doing (quoting CG70230) so that they cannot question you later.
My mother recently passed away and has left me her house, which is valued at £400,000. I understand her nil-rate band for inheritance tax (IHT) is £325,000 so I'm liable for 40% of £75,000 for IHT. She had no other assets. I have
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