Thanks for the suggestion. I did, and I still didn't get a fully definite answer. I'll probably have to run it past a solicitor.Have you contacted SW?
Did you do this in writing or by phone?Thanks for the suggestion. I did, and I still didn't get a fully definite answer. I'll probably have to run it past a solicitor.
I only spoke to someone by phone, and they didn't seem to be certain as to whether funds held in escrow would count as assessable capital against a means-tested social assistance payment.Did you do this in writing or by phone?
If in writing, what precisely was the reply?
You should write them a letter. They might give a specific response, they might give you a vague response, but they have to respond. Do all this before you start paying for legal advice.phone
Dominic Coyle answered a related question in the Times recently, looks like there is also inheritance tax to consider.Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Capital (savings and investments) and the value of property owned but not personally used or enjoyed are assessed as means.
Where a Will has been proved or is in the process of being proven, it should be established whether the estate is to be administered in accordance with the terms of the Will or on the basis of the legal right of the person involved. The means should be assessed accordingly.
Where a Will has not been proved, the claimant's means should be assessed in accordance with the terms of the Will.
Dominic Coyle answered a related question in the Times recently, looks like there is also inheritance tax to consider.
In the OPs case however,my reading would be: if the property was sold and the net proceeds used to buy a PPR, the SW benefit would not be lost.
Reading the OP again - is it cash or property being inherited?
I had forgotten that DSP put their operational manual for the assessment of means online.
It is clear that property owned but not occupied is treated the same as savings:
It later says:
To me it looks like (effectively immediately) the house would become means for the purpose of a means assessment. The location of the funds from the sale wouldn't appear to be material.
Another issue is that any residual from the sale becomes assessed as means too. You might inherit a house worth €500k and the rules encourage you to buy a house worth €500k even if you don't need one.
Assuming you have no other property, one way round this might be to move into the house that is bequeathed for a period. It then becomes your own home, and any sale proceeds of your own home up to €190,500 are excluded from a means test. So you'd sell for €500k, buy another house for €310k, and the balance of €190k doesn't reduce any means-tested payment.
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