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Posted Tue, 30 Jul 2024 12:45:46 GMT by Merlin2465 George
Hi, Can my Father gift his mortgage free home to his 4 children equally. He will still live in the house, approx value of house is 320K?
Posted Fri, 02 Aug 2024 11:15:38 GMT by HMRC Admin 21 Response
Hi Merlin2465 George,
Yes but it will still be part of his estate for Inheritance tax as he is still living in it.
Thank you.
Posted Thu, 15 Aug 2024 13:57:44 GMT by Weeinnes Mitchell
Hi my mum gifted myself and my sister her property about 6.5 years ago she has rent for life in the property she currently has dementia and might have to go into care at some point in the future would the council take the property to pay for her care it’s value is approximately £80000 we love in Scotland the property was gifted when she was just ready to retire and had no signs of dementia which only started around 2 years ago
Posted Tue, 20 Aug 2024 08:13:23 GMT by BellaBoo
Hi, not a HMRC Admin but I can explain HMRC's responsibility (as a department) is tax so they can only answer tax questions. What you're asking about is deprivation of assets. It can apply to DWP administered benefits too but in this case you're talking about deprivation of assets in relation to care funding provided by your local government (council). Each council may have a different policy for enforcing deprivation of assets so you may find your council are the best ones to ask.
Posted Wed, 21 Aug 2024 06:02:54 GMT by Mum
I'd like to gift a second property to my two children. What is the process?
Posted Fri, 06 Sep 2024 07:42:14 GMT by HMRC Admin 20 Response
Hi,
Please note, HMRC does not give advice on how to pass on your own property, money, and possessions.
There are several routes you can go down if you want to transfer property to family members.
The types of transfers you can do, property transfer costs, and the different taxes you might have to pay all depend on a variety of things.
We would recommend you take legal advice to decide on the best option. 
Thank you.
Posted Sun, 15 Sep 2024 09:22:12 GMT by michaelhill1
Hello If my mum gifts her property to me and still lives in it should she pay me rent. If not is it still classed as her house. If she does pay rent does it need to be market value rent. Thanks
Posted Tue, 24 Sep 2024 12:04:15 GMT by HMRC Admin 32 Response
Hi,
Yes, you will then need to declare the rental income.
How Inheritance Tax works: thresholds, rules and allowances
Thank you.
Posted Fri, 01 Nov 2024 18:22:02 GMT by chris99
I am hoping you can advise me. My father lives in his house with his two children. The property is mortgage free. As it is his primary residence, i assume he can gift part of the house to his children with no capital gains to pay? Then as its also the two childrens primary residence, they could each receive £250,000 worth of the property without stamp duty to pay? Is my understanding correct? My father will want to remain living in the house. I note the following... 'If you want to continue living in your property after giving it away, you’ll need to: pay rent to the new owner at the going rate (for similar local rental properties) pay your share of the bills live there for at least 7 years You do not have to pay rent to the new owners if both the following apply: you only give away part of your property the new owners also live at the property'. In order to benefit from this and my father not have to pay rent, what percentage of the property can or cannot be given away. Thanks.
Posted Fri, 08 Nov 2024 08:41:06 GMT by HMRC Admin 19 Response
Hi,
You will need to contact our Inheritance Tax and Stamp Duty team for advice.
Inheritance Tax: general enquiries
Stamp Duty Land Tax
Thank you.
Posted Tue, 19 Nov 2024 17:55:30 GMT by suzie59
Hi, My parents are considering gifting 85% of their property to me and my brother. It is their main property, they plan to continue to live in it and pay me and my brother 85% of the market rent under a formal rental agreement. My brother and I will not live in the property. Under these conditions, would HMRC consider it a gift without reservation and therefore a potentially exempt transfer?
Posted Wed, 20 Nov 2024 15:02:49 GMT by HMRC Admin 19 Response
Hi,
Please contact the Inheritance Tax team for advice.
Inheritance Tax: general enquiries
Thank you.

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