Tax
How To Have Your Avocado And Eat It (With The Help Of Mum And Dad)

Two figures at law firm Thomson, Snell and Passmore have written an article discussing the tax implications when HNW families help children and grandchildren to get on the property ladder.
Getting on the property ladder is becoming a harder task for the youth of today, even high net worth millennials, who have acquired their large sums of wealth. Most millennials are turning to the bank of mum and dad to help them purchase their first property. Stuart Goodbody, partner and head of trust management, and Sarah Nettleship, associate in the private client team at law firm Thomson, Snell and Passmore have written this article discussing the tax implications that high net worth families may have helping out their children and grandchildren to get on the property ladder.
The editors of this news service are pleased to share these
views with readers and invite responses. They can email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com.
The plight of millennials and generation Z being unable to buy
their own houses is a hot topic in the media at the moment. But
whether or not younger generations in the UK really are unable to
buy properties due to their penchant for avocado on toast or not,
a great number are struggling to get on the housing ladder. Some
are lucky enough to have parents and grandparents who are able to
help them. Research suggests that as many as half of successful
first-time buyers have received help from their
families.
But how can those who want to help their children, or other
relatives, do so and what are the tax implications?
Guarantor mortgages
For the parent unable or unwilling to part with savings, the
mortgage market has developed a number of specialist products
that are collectively known as ‘guarantor’ mortgages. Such
arrangements carry a number of risks for the parent depending on
how the mortgage is set up and advice should be sought about the
risks before proceeding.
Private arrangements
Loans
A parent can lend money to their child. The loan can be interest
bearing or interest-free. The amount that has been lent will
still form part of the parent’s estate for inheritance tax on
their death if still outstanding at that time. Any interest that
is charged will attract income tax at the parents’ marginal
rates.
The terms of the loan should be recorded in writing and should
make it clear that it is a loan and not a gift. If the loan is
waived in the future, it will become a gift at that point and
form part of the parent’s seven-year clock for IHT from the date
of the waiver and not the date of the original loan. The waiver
itself should also be in writing.
It would be preferable for such a loan to be secured by legal
charge against the property title to protect repayment in the
event of the child’s financial or relationship difficulties.
However, a mortgage lender is unlikely to be happy with this
which increases the risk that the parent might not get all their
money back.
Part purchase
Another option would be to join in the purchase. The parent will
have more protection and can also share in any future growth in
the property value.
If a mortgage lender is unhappy with the arrangement, the child
could be the only registered proprietor with sole responsibility
for the mortgage. but the parent could own a beneficial share in
the property (subject to the mortgage) set out in
a declaration of trust.
There are disadvantages with this option. On the sale of the
property, the parent’s share would be subject to capital gains
tax (CGT) as it will not be their main residence. Moreover, the
higher rates of Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) (the additional 3 per
cent) will apply for the whole property (and not just the
parent’s share) when the property is bought if the parent already
owns their own home.
Gifts
An outright gift of cash is probably the most tax efficient way
to help a child onto the property ladder. The gift will not form
part of the parent’s estate for IHT after seven years has passed.
A gift will also avoid the CGT and SDLT issues associated with
part purchase. However, the parent will be sacrificing control
over the money given away. It is also worth noting that an
outright gift to a child will be vulnerable if that child faces
matrimonial or financial trouble in the future.
Trusts
If a parent wishes to combine reducing the value of their own
estate for IHT and retaining control over the funds given, they
could consider transferring cash into a trust before buying the
property, or part of it, for their child using trust funds or
lending the funds to the child from the trust. If the child is
later deemed sensible and secure enough to receive an outright
interest in the property, trustee powers can be used to
facilitate this. The gift into trust will be a gift for IHT
purposes and will not form part of the parent’s estate for IHT
after seven years has passed, but such transfer should be limited
to the value of the nil rate band (£325,000 currently or £650,000
if both parents are contributing) to avoid an immediate IHT
liability.
If the trust purchases or part purchases the property, the higher
rates of Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) will apply if a discretionary
trust is used. It will be more appropriate to use a life interest
trust for this purpose instead so that the higher rates will not
apply (unless the child already has a stake in another property).
Both types of trust are particularly efficient for CGT where the
property is the child’s main residence.
Trusts have their own inheritance tax regime and if the funds in
the trust, including the value of any outstanding loan, exceed
the available nil rate band(s), some IHT will be payable every 10
years.
Recent inheritances
If a parent has recently inherited money, they could consider
using a Deed of Variation as a way to help their children onto
the property ladder. There is a two-year window from a person’s
death in which to vary the inheritance received tax
efficiently. The variation creates a tax fiction whereby
the funds are deemed never to have been in the recipient’s estate
in the first place and so will be out of their estate immediately
and not on their seven-year clock.
In the variation, the parent could give the funds straight to the
child or they could create a discretionary trust in which they
and their children are beneficiaries. As above, the trust could
fund part of the purchase or lend the child the money to purchase
a property. When the money is eventually paid back to the trust,
the parents can enjoy the use of the funds without the funds
forming part of their estate for IHT purposes.
Conclusion
A parent should consider what sort of help they wish to give
their children before going ahead. Can they afford to be so
generous and are they comfortable with the level of risk to the
capital? Do they want the capital back in the future? They should
thoroughly research the mortgage market and get proper legal,
investment and mortgage advice at each stage of the
process.