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Carey Olsen Lauds Return Of Cap On Probate Duty In Jersey
Tom Burroughes
14 December 2012
The reintroduction of a cap on the amount of probate duty
payable on a deceased person’s movable property held in Jersey
has been welcomed by offshore law firm
Carey Olsen. On 5 December, the island’s parliament voted to bring back
the cap, part of the jurisdiction’s stamp duty regime. The administration of a deceased person's movable property (property other than land) located in Jersey
has attracted a charge to probate duty for many years. The duty, which is payable when the applicant
(usually the deceased's executor or closest heir) applies for either a
grant of probate or letters of administration in Jersey,
is calculated by reference to the value of the deceased's net movable estate situate in Jersey at the date of death. Historically, the duty has been fixed at around £80 ($129) of duty for
each £10,000 of net value, Carey Olsen explained in a note. Until 2005, there was a cap on the amount of probate duty
payable; the amount of stamp duty payable did not increase once the value
of the net movable estate reached £13,360,000. The effect of this cap, Carey Olsen said, was that the maximum
amount of probate duty payable on the deceased's Jersey
estate was £100,000. This cap was seen as a useful feature in Jersey's financial services
regime as it encouraged high net worth individuals to deposit significant funds
in Jersey, safe in the knowledge that, on their death, the maximum amount of probate
duty payable would be fixed and certain. “The cap was removed in 2005 and its reintroduction on the
same terms is to be warmly welcomed by the private wealth industry as it
removes a potential barrier to investment by HNWIs in the island,” the firm
said.