Daily Maverick

Buying a house in children’s names is a minefield

- Kenny Meiring is an independen­t financial adviser. Contact him on 082 856 0348 or at financialw­ellnesscoa­ch.co.za. Send your questions to kenny.meiring@sfpadvice.co.za.

This is an absolute minefield and you need to consider a number of factors. These include: Donations tax

Estate duty

Capital gains tax

I recommend that you have your circumstan­ces looked at by an experience­d financial planner before you make any decision.

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Donations tax

If you buy the new property in the names of your children, this will be considered a donation. A donations tax of 20% will be levied on what you paid for the property less your annual R100,000 donation allowance. A straight donation, as your sister advised, is seldom recommende­d.

One way around this is to lend your children the money to buy the house. It is important that you charge an interest rate so that it is not classed as a soft loan. The usual practice is to charge the repo rate plus 1% or 2%. Every year you are allowed to donate R100,000.

This can be used to offset the loan repayments. You can therefore get the same net effect over a period of time without having to pay donations tax.

Estate duty

Estate duty is not as big a deal as most people think it is. You and your spouse get an abatement of R7-million between the two of you. So only once you have passed that threshold will estate duty become an issue in your lives.

Capital gains tax

The tax at death that takes most people by surprise is capital gains tax (CGT). Death is deemed to be a capital gain event so all your assets will have been deemed to have been sold at the date of your death and CGT will have to be paid. CGT will have to be paid on the house.

However, if the house is in your name at the time of death, the first R2-million will not attract CGT. You will only pay CGT on the balance of the gain.

In conclusion, I would recommend that you get someone to do the calculatio­ns for you, to compare owning the property in your own name with donating it to the children. You may find that you do a lot of fancy financial footwork for little or no gain.

You also need to be careful when you go down this particular path as it means your home will be classed as an asset in your children’s estates.

If they predecease you or get divorced, it can cause a lot of unnecessar­y complicati­ons in your life and you could find yourself being financiall­y compromise­d at a stage in life when you are financiall­y vulnerable.

Compare owning the property in your own name with donating it to the children. You may find that you do a lot of fancy financial footwork for little or no gain

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