They pay CGT, you pay 1% stamp duty and no gift tax.
Yea, I know. It would be messy, but I doubt any bank would tack €60k onto a mortgage so I could pay a tax bill. I have a deposit saved for the rebuild but not enough to pay that.
Would that work? Would that €60k to them be to pay the tax bill? I've been reading this here and it seems that it'll still be taken that the house is worth €250k so the extra would go towards my lifetime cap.
If I had the 100k mortgage, then at €60k, I'd still have to get another mortgage to rebuild, bank might not like that.
Why not buy it from them at undervalue and borrow the money from a bank to do so?
Some banks have de minimis levels of (say) €100k so find out what their minimum mortgage is. Then borrow the €100k. Then pay them €60k for the house and immediately pay back €40k of the mortgage.
It should be easy enough to make the numbers work.
I would get some advice on that approach. Revenue may get suspicious if you buy too far below market value. They would still see it as a gain and either you or the parents would be liable for payment
I am aware of a situation where one family member sold a property to another family member well below what similar properties in the same estate were sold for. This meant that the seller was not hit for substantial CGT and the buyer did not have to borrow as much thus reducing his mortgage and interest repayments.It would take place at deemed market value for CGT, CAT, and stamp duty purposes so I’m not sure what you mean?
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