Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I still have a gross roll-up Summit Fund (Summit Mutual Fund) and they told me recently that it's subject to 41% exit tax on encashment but not 8-yearly deemed disposal due to some "special admin arrangement" with Revenue since 2012.(Unless the fund predates the introduction of Exit Tax and it's a gross fund.)
Are you referring specifically to investments subject to 8 yearly deemed disposal or also funds such as the one mentioned here which is gross roll-up and only subject to tax on encashment?Every time I see one of these I think 'What would I write in the suitability/reasons why letter that would cover all the eventualities of the taxation permutations on increases/decreases in value, after the switch, that I could stand over as good advice?' No easy task, so I tend to just leave them be.
Do you mean that you'd have made up the exit tax reduction in that time?I did a few quick calculations and on an after tax basis (assuming you pay exit tax and then reinvest in a similar exit tax regime but with 1% lower fees), you would be better off after 1 year
If this is true, it changes the maths. It means you can benefit from the compounding effect, which over the long term, outweighs everything else.I still have a gross roll-up Summit Fund (Summit Mutual Fund) and they told me recently that it's subject to 41% exit tax on encashment but not 8-yearly deemed disposal due to some "special admin arrangement" with Revenue since 2012.
No, of course not. Just that when you encash the policy after x years, you have more money if you switched.Do you mean that you'd have made up the exit tax reduction in that time?
Not sure why you don't believe me and what EBS themselves told me recently?If this is true
Sorry, that's not much clearer to me.No, of course not. Just that when you encash the policy after x years, you have more money if you switched.
I certainty believe you ClubMan. But I'd need convincing that EBS were telling the truth.Not sure why you don't believe me and what EBS themselves told me recently?
It depends on when the policy was originally taken out. The deemed disposal rules, first introduced in the Finance Act 2006, didn't apply retrospectively, so older policies continue on a gross roll-up basis without taxation every 8 years (which is why the 2012 date makes sense - it was before the 8 year anniversary of the new tax).But I'd need convincing that EBS were telling the truth.
I certainty believe you ClubMan. But I'd need convincing that EBS were telling the truth.
If you invest 10K and earn 5% with summit after 3 years you have 11,576. If you cash that out, after Exit tax you have 10,930Sorry, that's not much clearer to me.
Thanks - that's much clearer to me.If you invest 10K and earn 5% with summit after 3 years you have 11,576. If you cash that out, after Exit tax you have 10,930
If you take that 10,930 and invest it at 6% after 1 year you have 11,586 which if you cash out, after exit tax will be 11,317
If instead you had left the money in Summit (at 5%), you would have had 12,155 which after Exit tax would be 11,271
So you're 46 Euro better off, after Tax.
And it's similar for every other year in the 8 year cycle.
I doubt it - they're different taxes as far as I know so unrelated.Whenever I encash the funds, will the SSIA exit tax be allowed against any final roll up exit tax, same as the 8 year deemed disposal tax is supposed to work?
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