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THE INVESTOR

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27

TAX PLANNING

T

he approach of the

tax year-end on

5April should serve as

a reminder to review

your finances and ensure

that you have made the

most of all the available tax allowances and

exemptions – particularly as the squeeze

on the government’s finances could put

some of the more generous ones at risk.

Perhaps the most useful allowance

is the Individual SavingsAccount (ISA),

which allows investments to build up

without any further tax to pay on income

and capital gains. Every person has their

own allowance, £15,240 in the current

tax year, which means that couples can

shelter £30,480 between them.There is

also a Junior ISA (JISA) for children under

the age of 18.This year’s JISA allowance is

£4,080 and anyone – parent, grandparent

or family friend – can contribute to the

fund, which cannot be accessed until

the child reaches 18, when they will get

full control over the money.The ISA

allowance will rise to £20,000 from

April but any unused allowance from

this tax year will be lost.

Legislative changes introduced in

2015 further improved the long-term tax

benefits of ISAs.When one partner dies,

the surviving spouse can inherit their ISA

savings and retain the tax-efficient wrapper

that previously would have been lost.

Those with estate planning needs should

consider using their gifting exemptions

before tax year-end.The main one of these

is the £3,000 annual exemption, which

can cover just one gift or be split across a

number of different recipients.The value of

these gifts will immediately fall out of the

estate for InheritanceTax purposes.Other

exemptions cover wedding gifts, where

the amount varies from £1,000 to £5,000

depending on the relationship between the

donor and recipient, regular gifts made out

of surplus income and any number of gifts

worth less than £250 in a single tax year.

IHT planning for the family home will

also become easier fromApril,when

the Residence Nil Rate Band will be

introduced.Those who are married or

in a civil partnership can already pass any

unused part of the £325,000 nil rate

band for IHT to their partner.ThisApril,

a further £100,000 from the family home

will also be exempt from tax, provided it is

passed on to direct descendants.This will

rise gradually to £175,000 in the tax year

beginningApril 2020.

Pension pots can also, in most cases,

be passed on completely tax-free when

someone dies before the age of 75. For

deaths over that age, income taken from the

pension fund will be taxed at the recipient’s

marginal tax rate. However, whatever the

age of death, their pension is generally not

part of the estate for IHT purposes, nor is

it subject to Capital GainsTax (CGT).

“It’s an incredible way of passing on

your wealth, if you can afford not to touch

it,” saidTony Müdd, Divisional Director,

Development andTechnical Consultancy

at St. James’s Place.

Married couples and civil partners

will get the best out of their personal

allowances (set at £11,000 this tax year)

and other allowances and reliefs if they

plan their holdings so that both individuals

are shielding the maximum from tax.

The tax regime for CGT is relatively

generous with every taxpayer having an

annual allowance of £11,100 and gains

above that taxed at 20% for higher rate

taxpayers (10% for basic rate taxpayers),

or 28% for residential property-related

profits (18% for basic rate taxpayers). If

your spouse is not using their allowance,

you can transfer assets to him or her – a

procedure that is not treated as a sale and

so is not subject to CGT. If you both then

sell assets before the end of the year, you

can effectively double the allowance to

£22,200. However, if you don’t exploit

the allowance this year, it doesn’t roll

over and is lost forever.

“The best solution is to structure

your investments in as many different

forms for tax purposes as you can,” says

Müdd.“This, and future government

administrations,may change how tax is

applied, so using several wrappers is best.”

For further advice and information on

tax planning opportunities, please contact

your St James’s Place Partner.

This could be a particularly good year to

maximise pension contributions. While

Chancellor Philip Hammond did not make

any changes to the contribution limits in his

first Autumn Statement, the fact that the

government highlighted the annual £48 billion

cost of tax relief has sparked concern that he

may do so this year.

“Maximise what you can do on pensions now

because the current regime is unlikely to last,”

100% of earnings if that is lower, although

there are restrictions for those paying

additional rate tax. There is an overriding

limit of £1 million that can be accumulated

in a pension pot over a lifetime.

Even those who have little or no annual

earnings receive a tax-free allowance £2,880

a year, which will be increased to £3,600 by

basic rate tax relief. This can be a useful way

to save for children and non-earning partners.

says Tony Müdd, Divisional Director, Development

and Technical Consultancy at St. James’s Place.

He expects the Treasury to cut back on up-front

pension reliefs for higher earners.The introduction

of the Lifetime ISA fromApril also hints of a

different approach to tax incentives on savings.

Although pension tax relief has been limited

through recent law changes, it is still worth

making the most of the allowances available.

The current annual allowance is £40,000, or

PENSIONS ALERT

It’s an incredibleway of

passing on your wealth,

if you can afford not to

touch it

25TH ANNIVERSARY