UK Income Tax and Capital Gains Tax Basics for Offshore Trustees By Natalie Dimond BPP PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
CONTENTS Residence and Domicile Liability to tax- Settlors Liability to Tax – Trusts Liability to Tax – Beneficiary Reporting Requirements for IT Occasions of Charge for CGT The Settlor Charge The Charge on the Beneficiary Rebasing elections Underlying Companies Planning Ideas TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Implications of residence and domicile on UK tax exposure (cont’d) Non domicile Resident IT-worldwide IT-UK and foreign remitted CGT-worldwide CGT-UK and foreign remitted *(depending on whether remittance user) IHT-worldwide IHT-UK only Non resident IT-UK only CGT-None TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Offshore Trustees- liability to Income Tax
The Settlor The settlor is the person who provides the economic benefit to the settlement If one person settles the initial settled funds of, say, £100 and then another person provides additional assets of £10,000, the second individual providing the £10,000 will be a second settlor, even though he may not be named on the deed. It is therefore important to be able to identify who is the real ‘economic’ settlor and any individuals who may have added to the settlement. A settlor will be deemed to have an interest in the trust whether or not he can or does benefit from it, unless he has been irrevocably excluded from benefit (from this and any other trust derived from it). TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to tax -Settlors A UK resident settlor will be liable to tax on the trust income if he has retained an interest in the trust. This may occur if he (or his spouse) is a named beneficiary, or if he (or his spouse) has not been excluded from benefit. If so, the settlor is chargeable on all of the trust income with no deduction for trust expenses, in the tax year in which the income arises. A settlor will also be liable to tax on trust income if he has created a trust in favour of a minor child, and the trust has distributed income. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Residence Corporate trustees are resident where the company is incorporated and where the central management and control resides. Non resident trustees pay UK tax on UK income only. The rate of tax is determined by the type of trust and the type of interest in the trust. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Rental Income and the Non-Resident Landlord Scheme Non-residents have to pay a 20% withholding tax on any rental arising on UK property or land The letting agents are responsible for paying this over to HMRC( or tenant if no agent) Where the rent is less than £100 a week there is no requirement to do this. The tax withheld will be treated as a credit on your final tax liability. Providing your tax affairs are up to date, a non-resident landlord can apply to have rents received gross. (Form NRL1) TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Rental Income and the Non-Resident Landlord Scheme The tax on the rental is then calculated and paid alongside the self assessment return on the 31st Jan following the tax year It is possible to get a deduction for loan interest and expenses as long as it is wholly and exclusively in relation to the rental income. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Exempt Trusts A trust will not have a liability to tax if it is: A bare trust - as the liability to income tax is borne solely by the beneficiary. A charitable trust – as the income is exempt provided that it is used for charitable purposes. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Sham Trusts The offshore trustees must ensure that although they must carry out the wishes of the settlor, they are genuinely managing the trust and therefore it is not regarded as a sham for tax purposes. If it is, the assets are not seen to be being held on trust, but by the trustees as a nominee of the settlor. In these circumstances, the settlor will be taxed as though he is still the owner of the assets. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to tax The rate of tax which the trust will suffer is determined by the type of trust. Discretionary trusts are taxed at the rate applicable to trusts (‘RATT’) which is currently 37.5% for dividends and 45% for all other income. (new rates from 6 April 2013) Interest in Possession (‘IIP’) trusts are taxable at the basic rates of tax, which are 10% on dividends and 20% on all other income. Accumulation and maintenance (‘A&M’) trusts are taxable according to whether the beneficiary has attained an interest in possession. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to Tax – Interest In Possession Trusts IP and A&M trusts where beneficiary has attained a life interest Certain types of UK income will have had tax deduced at source which will satisfy the trustees liability. These include: Dividends – with the notional 10% tax credit attached. Interest – In some cases 20% tax will have been deducted at source. Rental income – where NRL status has not been applied for and 20% tax has been deducted by the tenant or letting agent. Where all the trust income has suffered basic rate tax at source, the trustees will have no further liability to tax. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to tax - Life Tenants (Not Settlors) Where the life tenant is not the settlor he is liable to tax on the income of the trust, net of trust expenses, i.e. on the amount he physically receives. Where income has suffered tax at source or the trustees have paid tax, the life tenant will be able to claim a deduction against his liability for the tax so paid. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to Tax – Discretionary Trusts Discretionary and A&M Trusts in their discretionary phase. These trusts are subject to RATT (Rate Applicable to trustees). The first £1,000 is charged at the basic or dividend rate depending on the income received. If there is more than one trust in existence with the same settlor the £1,000 ‘standard rate band’ is shared between the trusts, with a minimum of £200. RATT also applies to settlor interested discretionary trusts. Non resident trusts are exempt from RATT on interest and dividends where there are no UK beneficiaries, although RATT still applies to trading and rental income TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to Tax – Discretionary Trusts Allowable trust management expenses (‘TMEs’) are available to reduce the trustees liability to RATT. The allowable TMEs are restricted to those relating to the chargeable income only. For example, if the trust is non UK-resident, the expenses must be apportioned between UK and non-UK income. The portion relating to UK income is applied against UK dividends first. Relief is given by way of a reduction in the tax charged, as income used to pay for TMEs is taxable at the basic rate of tax, not RATT. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Discretionary Beneficiaries Extra Statutory Concession B18 A discretionary beneficiary is liable to tax only on distributions received by him. The distribution is taxed on a UK resident beneficiary as non-savings income at the individuals relevant rate. Under Extra Statutory Concession B18 a beneficiary may claim a credit for UK tax paid or suffered by the trustees, provided: The trustees have submitted tax returns and paid the trustees’ tax liability. The distribution was not made out of income arising more than six years ago. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Discretionary Beneficiaries Extra Statutory Concession B18 UK tax suffered in an underlying company is not available as a credit against the beneficiary’s liability to tax. Distributions from a non-UK resident Trust will be made proportionately from UK and non-UK source income. Where ESC B18 does not apply the distribution is treated as being paid gross. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Liability to tax - UK Resident, Non-domiciled Beneficiary IIP Trusts A UK resident, non-UK domiciled beneficiary will be liable to tax on UK source income and may be liable on foreign income depending on whether it is remitted to the UK or whether he is taxed on an arising basis. Discretionary and A&M Trusts A UK resident, non-UK domiciled beneficiary may be liable to tax on discretionary payments depending on whether they are remitted to the UK or whether he is taxed on an arising basis. Their exposure will depend on whether the beneficiary has claimed the remittance basis of taxation TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Reporting requirements Trustees must report any taxable income annually on form SA900 (subject to a few exceptions). Trustees of a bare trust are not required to complete a tax return. If the trustees are chargeable to income tax and have not received a notice to file or a tax return they must inform HM Revenue & Customs within 6 months of end of tax year i.e., by 5 October. Paper returns are required to be filed by the 31 October following the tax year end. This deadline is extended to 31 January following the tax year end for returns filed online. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Offshore Trustees- liability to Capital Gains Tax
Occasions of charge Upon creation of the settlement There is a disposal made by the settlor upon creating or adding assets to the trust The settlor is deemed to have made a disposal to the trustees at market value. He will therefore incur a gain or loss calculated by taking the market value of the asset gifted over original cost (but holdover relief may be available). Pre 2006-If the transfer was made into a life interest or accumulation and maintenance trust then it was only possible to defer a gain if the asset being transferred was a business asset TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Occasions of charge Trust created by will/intestacy: If the transfer was made into a discretionary trust, then the gain on any asset could be transferred. Post 2006- All transfers into an Offshore trust could apply for the gain to be deferred. Trust created by will/intestacy: The trustees take the assets passing to the trust at probate value and are deemed to have acquired those assets at date of death TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Occasions of charge If the settlor is resident and domiciled in the UK at the time of the transfer, then they will be chargeable to CGT on worldwide assets If the settlor is resident and non-domiciled, then it is possible only the transfer of UK assets will be considered depending on whether he is a remittance basis user. CGT into trust is mostly avoided by gifting cash and getting the trustees to purchase the asset from a third party, or by gifting assets with a low value but high potential growth TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Occasions of charge Disposals by trustees Disposal of trust assets Not just the sale of trust assets, but also occasions which may be deemed disposals, such as granting of certain leases, extraction of minerals from land, etc. Distributions to beneficiaries Where capital payments are made in the form of the transfer of trust assets, or where the trust is terminated and assets are passed out as part of the termination, the assets are deemed to be disposed of at market value. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Non-UK Resident Trusts How does CGT affect offshore trustees? Despite not having a liability to CGT (if the trustees are not engaged in a UK trade), offshore trustees should be mindful of the imposition of CGT on the UK resident settlors and beneficiaries of their trusts as a result of their actions. Trustees will also be required to keep full and accurate records of the purchase and disposal of assets to ensure gains can be reported by the settlor or beneficiary. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the settlor (s86 TCGA 1992) A UK resident and domiciled settlor of an offshore trust will be charged to CGT where: The trustees have made a gain, and The possible beneficiaries of the trust include any person out of the following: The settlor The settlor’s spouse Children of the settlor, or his spouse, over the age of majority Spouses of those children Any company controlled by any of the above TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the settlor (s86 TCGA 1992) If a gain is made in the circumstances set out above it is treated as though it were made by the settlor himself. Note: In order to avoid this charge it may be necessary to include a provision within the trust deed excluding the persons listed above from benefiting. Settlements that can benefit grandchildren are subject to the provisions of s86 if created after 17 March 1998 or become ‘tainted’ after this date. A trust is ‘tainted’ if: Property or income is provided for the purposes of the settlement Trustees become neither UK resident or ordinarily resident, or dual resident The terms of the settlement are altered so that there is a chance of a grandchild (or grandchild's spouse/controlled company) benefiting Any grandchild (or grandchild's spouse/controlled company) benefits from the settlement but is not a named beneficiary. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s87 TCGA 1992) CGT will be charged on a capital distribution to a beneficiary if: The beneficiary is UK resident and the trust contains stockpiled gains and those gains have not been assessed on the settlor or allocated to a capital payment previously Bear in mind that the capital payment itself may trigger a gain if an asset is distributed. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s87 TCGA 1992) A capital payment can be: a cash payment: A payment that is not received as income by the beneficiary A payment to settle the debt of a beneficiary a distribution of assets The transfer of an asset from the trust A beneficiary becoming absolutely entitled against the trustees or a benefit The conferring of any benefit (e.g. beneficial loan, use of property owned by the trust at a rent less than market value.) But not a payment on arms length terms. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s731 ITA 2007) The trustees will also need to consider the impact of relevant income, which may be matched to capital payments in priority to gains where the trust was created with a tax avoidance motive . Relevant income (under section 731 ITA 2007) is the undistributed, accumulated income within the trust and any underlying company. It is calculated by taking the gross income received, less any expenses and income distributions, and then added to any amount of relevant income that remained unmatched in previous years. The total relevant income is then matched to the capital payments arising in the year, before the capital payments are matched to gains. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s87 TCGA 1992) The capital payment is matched against trust gains made by the offshore trustees on a ‘Last In Last Out’ basis. Where payments are made and no gains exist the payments are carried forward until the trust makes gains. The beneficiary is treated as though he had made the gain himself. He may set his personal annual exemption against the deemed gain. If the gain was matched to gains that the trustees had realised more than a year before, the beneficiary is charged an additional amount (the supplementary charge) based on the number of years that the gains had been ‘stockpiled’ in the trust. The supplementary charge is calculated as 10% of the CGT charge for each year that the gains were retained over one year, up to a maximum of 6 years. The effective rate of tax payable by the beneficiary can reach up to 44.8% (28% + (6x 2.8%)). TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s87 TCGA 1992) Note that capital payments are matched to trust gains within a given tax year on a pro rata basis, not on a daily basis. If capital payments in the year exceed gains under s.2(2), then the gains must be matched with the capital payments in the relevant proportion of each of those capital payments. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s87 TCGA 1992) UK resident, non-domiciled beneficiaries A non-domiciled beneficiary may be taxed on capital payments in the year in which they are matched to gains, or on the remittance basis, in the year in which the capital payment is received in or remitted into the UK. This depends on whether they claim the remittance basis. For non-domiciled beneficiaries, it is important that the trustees are mindful of where the payment is to be made, in order to avoid an unnecessary remittance. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
The charge on the beneficiary (s87 TCGA 1992) A capital payment under the remittance basis still reduces the s.2(2) amount even where the payment may be (un)taxed under the remittance basis. i.e where the capital payment may be made into the beneficiaries foreign bank account. It does not make any difference whether the gain is from a UK or foreign situs asset, a gain is still calculated. A capital payment may be remitted to the UK in a year before the s.87 deemed gains accrue. A capital payment to a non-UK resident beneficiary will also be matched against the 2(2) gains of the trust (but will not be liable to UK tax). TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Rebasing Elections UK resident, non-domiciled beneficiaries UK resident, non-domiciled beneficiaries were brought into the stockpiled gains regime from 5 April 2008. Trustees may make an election in order that any non-domiciled beneficiary in receipt of a capital payment will only be charged to CGT on gains realised and accruing after 5 April 2008. The rebasing election applies to all assets of the trust and its underlying companies. A rebasing election needs to be made by 31 January in the year following the end of the tax year in which a capital payment is made to any UK resident beneficiary (it does not matter where they are domiciled), or at any time before a capital payment has been made. If a rebasing election is not made the capital payment made to the non-UK domiciled beneficiary can be matched to gains accruing before 5 April 2008. The election does not affect UK resident and domiciled beneficiaries TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Underlying companies The income of an underlying company can also form part of the relevant income pool under section 731 ITA 2007. Gains (other than some from high value residential property see next slide) made by an underlying company are included within sections 86 and 87, as these are attributed to the trust under section 13, whether or not funds are transferred to the trustees by way of a distribution. For this to apply: The company must be non-UK resident, The trust must be a participator (i.e., either fully own or jointly own more than 10% of the company with 4 or fewer other persons). In calculating these company gains, indexation allowance is still available. Losses are not attributed to the trust and cannot be carried forward, and therefore if they are not utilised against company gains in the year they are extinguished. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Annual Residential Property Tax-Related Chargeable Gain (ARPT) CGT will be extended to include gains on the disposal of UK residential property by non-resident, non-natural persons, where the consideration on the disposal is more than £2m. Note that trusts holding UK residential property are not included in the CGT charge. The criteria will be the same as the annual charge ie companies, partnerships with corporate members and collective investment schemes. CGT will be on all gains made from 6 April 2013. There will not be a charge on historical gains from the date of purchase. Exclusions for property held for the purpose of some type of business, including rental businesses. CGT rate of 28% even when the gain accrues to a UK company The portion of the gain which is not ARPT related will remain available to be apportioned to UK resident participators or to offshore trustees. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Transfers out of an Offshore Trust for CGT purposes Any transfers out of an Offshore settlement and the termination of a settlement constitutes a capital payment. Unless gains within the settlement have been charged under the settlor charge, or previously distributed, if applicable, they will be matched to the capital payment and taxed in the year of transfer or termination. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Planning ideas Washing out gains Capital payments made to non-resident beneficiaries will be matched to the stockpiled gains pool, however the beneficiary will not be charged CGT on the distribution. Capital payments made to UK resident beneficiaries up the level of their unused annual exemption (provided there is no relevant income) will wash out stockpiled gains without incurring a CGT charge. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Reporting requirements Trustees Trustees of a UK trust must declare gains on their tax return. Offshore trustees may receive a Form 50(FS) from HMRC requesting them to report: Gains of the trust and also of companies underlying the trust Capital payments and to whom they have been made Details of stockpiled gains or unmatched payments carried forward Details of accumulated undistributed income which can be matched to capital payments This form is not statutory, but HMRC may seek the information requested directly from the known settlors or beneficiaries TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Reporting requirements Settlors and Beneficiaries Where either: A settlor is liable to CGT on gains under s86 or A beneficiary is liable to CGT on gains under s87 They must enter the gains in the CGT supplementary pages of their tax return. Additional CGT liability arising from a supplementary charge must be calculated and entered on the return It is important that trustees keep records of any trust gains to enable UK settlors or beneficiaries to calculate their tax liability. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Disclaimer The information contained in this handout is intended to provide general guidance. It is not intended to replace the specific advice which should be sought from an appropriate professional adviser before taking any particular course of action. TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000
Contact Natalie Dimond BPP Professional Education nataliedimond@bpp.com 01534 711837 TITLE HERE 00 MONTH 0000