I'm about to submit a probate application and there's property involved that has to be valued. People tell me it's better to go with a high valuation in order to save on CGT down the road. I'm not sure exactly why.
We intend to hold on to the property for a few years before selling and we'll probably sell piecemeal: land, business premises, site, house (none of these is fantastically valuable and won't be quick to sell). If we take lower valuation then we save much-needed cash by paying less CAT. When we sell CGT will be based off of the probate valuation so in the end the State gets its 33% no matter what.
However I've reading that there can be a case where you can be levied CAT on the full sale price of an asset and CGT on the difference between the sale price and the probate valuation. It doesn't seem logical that you can pay twice but I turned up a presentation where some specialist addresses this and advises a high probate valuation. What I don't get is in what circumstances can Revenue levy CAT *and* CGT on an asset sale.
I understand that you want a higher valuation to use up your CAT threshold fully but with the properties in question they'll all be over that amount anyway.
We intend to hold on to the property for a few years before selling and we'll probably sell piecemeal: land, business premises, site, house (none of these is fantastically valuable and won't be quick to sell). If we take lower valuation then we save much-needed cash by paying less CAT. When we sell CGT will be based off of the probate valuation so in the end the State gets its 33% no matter what.
However I've reading that there can be a case where you can be levied CAT on the full sale price of an asset and CGT on the difference between the sale price and the probate valuation. It doesn't seem logical that you can pay twice but I turned up a presentation where some specialist addresses this and advises a high probate valuation. What I don't get is in what circumstances can Revenue levy CAT *and* CGT on an asset sale.
I understand that you want a higher valuation to use up your CAT threshold fully but with the properties in question they'll all be over that amount anyway.