Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

CGT changes may affect your planning

You may need to schedule a meeting with your financial planner to work out how the changes to capital gains tax will affect your investment­s and your estate, writes Laura du Preez. THINGS THAT WON’T CHANGE

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Capital gains tax changes announced in the Budget this year mean you may need to pay more attention to where you invest your money, how you realise your investment­s and whether your estate will have enough cash to pay any tax liability that arises.

It was announced in the Budget this week that the maximum effective rate of capital gains tax (CGT) – paid by people on the highest tax bracket of 41 percent – will increase from 13.7 percent to 16.4 percent from March 1, but the annual exclusion on capital gains will also increase – from R30 000 to R40 000.

The effective rate of the tax will be increased by way of an increase in any capital gain you make that is added to your taxable income – the so- called inclusion rate. From March 1, 40 percent of any gain you make after you have deducted the R40 000 exclusion will be included in your taxable income.

Currently, one third of the capital gains you make on investment­s above the annual exclusion are included in your taxable income and taxed at your marginal tax rate. If your income puts you into the top marginal tax bracket, your highest tax rate is 41 percent, and if onethird of your taxable capital gain is taxed at 41 percent, it means your effective tax rate on the gain is 13.7 percent.

For any taxable gains made after March 1, if your income puts you into the highest marginal tax bracket and 40 percent of your taxable capital gain is taxed at 41 percent, it means your effective tax rate on the gain is 16.4 percent.

If your marginal tax rate is lower, you will pay a lower percentage of the taxable gain as tax.

If your capital gain is a lot higher than the increased annual exclusion, your CGT will be much higher under the increased tax.

Ian Beere, a financial adviser at Netto Invest and winner of the Financial Planner of the Year award in 2007, says decisions to sell highvalue investment­s and property will need to be looked at more carefully.

People with second properties will be the most hard hit when they sell one property in search of the next opportunit­y, he says.

When you sell your primary residence (the property you use as your home), the capital gain that is exempt from CGT remains at R2 million.

Beere says the cost of moving home if you live in a property over the R2 million mark will become more expensive as the profits you make will attract higher CGT. This is especially the case if the property is worth more than R10 million and attracts higher transfer duties.

Hedley Lamarque, a financial adviser at BDO Wealth Advisers who holds the Certified Financial Planner accreditat­ion, cites the example of an investor who has made a capital gain of R3 030 000 on his or her investment.

The tax payable under the existing CGT provisions will be calculated as follows: R3 030 000 less the R30 000 exclusion equals R3 000 000. This amount multiplied by 33.33 percent equals R1 000 000 in taxable income. Assuming a maximum tax rate of 41 percent, the investor will be liable for tax of R410 000.

Under the new CGT rules applicable from March 1, the CGT will be calculated as follows: R3 030 000 less the R40 000 exclusion equals R2 990 000. This amount multiplied by 40 percent equals R1 196 000 in taxable income. Assuming a maximum tax rate of 41 percent, the investor will be liable for tax of R490 360, which is R80 360 more than ◆ Estate duty remains at 20 percent of the dutiable estate and the exemption from estate duty remains at R3.5 million, with any unused portion of the exemption rolling over to the estate of the second-dying spouse. ◆ Donations tax remains at 20 percent of any donation above the exemption of R100 000 a year. Donations between spouses and to public benefit organisati­ons are exempt from donations tax. ◆ Dividends tax on investment­s remains at 15 percent. it would have been in the current tax year.

Lamarque suggests that, as an investor, you cash in investment­s on which you have made a capital gain equal to the annual exclusion each year. In other words, you would cash in investment­s with a R30 000 gain in the current tax year and from the 2016/17 tax year you would cash in investment­s with a gain of R40 000.

Capital gains are calculated by subtractin­g what is known as your base cost (typically the amount you invested) from the proceeds of the sale.

Lamarque says you can cash in investment­s on the last day of February and re-invest them the next day or soon thereafter. You will incur a small cost, but you will increase your base cost and hence reduce the taxable gain you make in future years.

A couple could effectivel­y cash out R780 000 of gains without paying any tax over 10 years (R30 000 x 1 year + R40 000 x nine years x two people) if they have taken advantage of this tax year’s CGT exemption, or can still do so, assuming that there are no further increases to the annual exclusion.

ON DEATH

When you die, you are deemed to have disposed of all your assets and CGT applies to any gains you made, but there is a higher exclusion on gains in the year of your death. The CGT exclusion on death is currently R300 000, and there is no increase in this amount for the tax year beginning on March 1.

This means that estates will be liable for more CGT than previously, so you need to plan to ensure that you have sufficient cash in your estate to cover this greater liability. Otherwise, the executors of your estate may be forced to sell assets.

If you have your assets in a trust, your inclusion rate for capital gains is currently 66.6 percent. This will increase to 80 percent on March 1.

Trusts are taxed at 41 percent, so the effective rate of taxation on capital gains will rise from 27.3 percent to 32.8 percent.

There are no exclusions for capital gains made in trusts, and so there is an enormous difference between the CGT you pay on the sale of a home when you own it in your own name and when it is held in a trust.

 ??  ?? GRAPHIC: COLIN DANIEL
GRAPHIC: COLIN DANIEL

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