I agree. Highly unlikely you will get useful advice on an Irish forum.Nobody here is likely to have a working knowledge of German tax and inheritance laws.
If a life interest in rental property is given to the wife by her husband in his will, but the property is actually left to the only child, when does the child inherit the property for the purposes of CAT liability question? Upon death of the testator or upon death of the wife?
Real world example:
Could I gift my son (we all live in Germany and are all tax resident here) an apartment located in Germany, but retain a life interest or give the life interest to my wife, without this meaning my son would be deemed (in the eyes of Revenue) to have already benefited from a gift or inheritance when it comes time for him to inherit my property located in Ireland?
the property would then not be subject to CGT
Thanks. I would really like to but I don't know what sort of professional would be able to help? Would anyone have a concrete suggestion? I dislike that even if you take professional advice, it is not binding. Revenue can take a different view and then you can either accept it or (at great expense) challenge it legally. In Germany I just ask the Finanzamt in writing and they will give me a binding answer in writing and I can proceed with a given course of action with certainty that it is not going to be overturned later.I would say on the wife’s death but you need to get proper professional advice
If a life interest in rental property is given to the wife by her husband in his will, but the property is actually left to the only child, when does the child inherit the property for the purposes of CAT liability question? Upon death of the testator or upon death of the wife?
It doesn't. It locks your son into receiving an inheritance taxed at full value, with a valuation date thrust upon him the day your spouse dies and with the tax rules that are in place then. It's a bad idea
Oh, Revenue will happily direct you on what to do and how much you should be paying to them, if you lay all your cards on the table to them. But they have absolutely no duty of care to you to ensure that your tax bills are minimised or that your interests are appropriately protected. As I've noted before, they're in the tax collection business, not the advice business.I dislike that even if you take professional advice, it is not binding. Revenue can take a different view and then you can either accept it or (at great expense) challenge it legally. In Germany I just ask the Finanzamt in writing and they will give me a binding answer in writing and I can proceed with a given course of action with certainty that it is not going to be overturned later.
They certainly won't give you any level of binding answer on the basis of a letter. At most they'll predicate it "on the basis of information provided" and/or "without prejudice". I can't imagine the Germans doing any differently.So if I write to Revenue and outline the situation and ask the above concrete question, Revenue will give me a binding written answer (obviously based on the law as it stands)? That would suffice! I haven't been able to get any concrete suggestions for suitable professional advice anyway so Revenue is my best shot and I have it from the horse's mouth so to speak. I will send an enquiry so
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