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All Forum Posts by: Simon Cragg

Simon Cragg has started 2 posts and replied 3 times.

Many thanks, Henry. They've lived in their house the whole time of ownership so under the current UK tax rules they'll get a full exemption from capital gains tax when they sell it.  The issue is really how to structure it so I can give them a monthly income without vastly increasing my tax liability. If they were to sell the house to me now (on favorable or market terms), while they would have a lump sum, they wouldn't have any collateral for me to secure a loan against for monthly loan draws  so we're kind of back to square one. I'll have another think and talk to my UK RE tax guy who might have some ideas.


Thanks again!
   

I have a somewhat unusual personal real estate conundrum to solve. My parents are retired and live in a SFR in the UK which is free and clear. They currently have just enough income from pensions (401(k) equivalent and the state pension) to live. However, when my father dies his pension will be reduced so my mother will need some additional income. Also, the house is probably worth about GBP280K in its current state and would need another 30-50K to make it rent ready/sellable, with an ARV of about $350K. Unfortunately, it likely won't be possible for my mother to afford a smaller house following my father's death since most other areas nearby are more expensive than the one they are in and she wants to stay in the same town.

My parents are considering a reverse mortgage whereby the house is mortgaged to a lender who then will pay them a fixed amount per month until they both die, at which point the lender takes the property. They are in their early 80s so this seems like a very expensive way of releasing equity. I thought about putting myself in the shoes of the equity release lender but with more favorable terms, such as agreeing to pay them a fixed amount per month which attracts interest which is then secured against the property. So on their death I’d be paid out my principal and interest first and then any equity remaining would pass through their wills.

My biggest concern with that idea is I think I’d be subject to high rate income tax (not lower rate capital gains tax) on the interest when it’s repaid, and I don’t know of any way I could rollover or defer that gain.

I’m pretty sure I’m not the first person to come across this challenge, and I’d welcome any creative ideas as to how best to work it.

Cheers

Simon

Hi - I'm looking to invest in UK residential real estate and I can't find any more detail on recently sold properties than the HM Land Registry Open Data site. That site only has the sale price, address and type of property. Is there any way I can find out how many bedrooms the sold properties have and their square footage?

Thanks
Simon