ANDREW FOSTER;187575 wrote:D Bergman;187532 wrote:
Some posters seem to be assuming it's sort of OK if you can get away with it - I doubt AF would have casually said (with no disapproval) that he knew someone who was a thief.
I described a CGT avoidance method, it's not evasion AFAIK.
Actually moving in means it IS your home. Redirecting mail to pretend you were there would be evasion. Living there means it's your home.
Sorry, but it just ain't so. Seems to be a common misconception though.
To be clear: if you move out of your home (or buy a property) and let it out for many years and then move back in and - a while later - sell it, then you do
not get the period you weren't there CGT-free as if it had been your primary residence for the whole period. Some of the gain - pro-rata - will be taxable. You do get to nibble away at it a bit, but only 9 months currently (used to be 36 months, years ago - which is why Julianw's old 2008 article linked above mentions 3 years - but reductions have been an easy "war on landlords" score for the chancellor).
See the worked examples at
https://www.property118....-minimise-cgt-liabilty/ and
https://www.property118....erty-you-have-lived-in/ (those were written when the PPR period was still 18 months).
And here's HMRC's info on how to report tax evasion/fraud:
https://www.gov.uk/gover...ct/report-fraud-to-hmrc . Please shop this "someone who did this through a portfolio of 8 properties and never paid a penny CGT" scumbag.