In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Having read both posts...........I would say .......that I lost the plot as well ...........sorry no help at all
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Unless you've paid in cash in an unmarked envelope you've likely got some proof of how much you've paid.
Is the UK government really going to care if you've screwed the Italian tax man out by under pricing the intial price?
Other thing when you file your UK taxes what documents do you normally file? I'm used to a "trust" based system. You declare. The tax man then has seven years to audit you if they don't believe. If they audit you find the box of receipts and waste months :eeeek:
I can't imagine the tax man caring what the cadestral value is. You received X. You paid Y. The diference worries the. Unless it's a non-arms length transaction then they might ask for an independent valuation.
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
take your point(s) NickZ, it was largely a philosophical question on my part. I have no intentions of selling in the forseeable future and hopefully if I ever decide to, I'll either be non-resident in UK by that stage or I'll declare the actuals and wait to see if anyone wants to investigate (you're right on the 7 year itch). If the worst happened, I would then point to the huge € cash withdrawl on the same day as the bankers draft etc. etc.. Just wondered whether there were perhaps sufficient people left in this situation currently for some honest souls to have sought a ruling from HMCE ..
sorry, re-reading my own post, I think I slightly lost the plot midway through ... what I'm really getting at is, if the new Italian law allows for paying tax on the cadestral value (while declaring the actual price paid) is there any milage in someone in the above circumstances attempting to convince UK taxman that the UK taxable gain should also be based on cadestral values rather than actual sale price?