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Posted Tue, 05 Nov 2024 10:59:11 GMT by HMRC Admin 17 Response

Hi ,
 
Income arising from your savings while not resident in the UK, is not taxable in the UK. 

Any income arising on the foreign savings while you are resident in the UK, is taxable and should be declared. 

Any capital can be transferred to the UK and not be taxable in the UK.

Thank you .
Posted Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:39:20 GMT by b mcshepherd
If I pay dividend tax on my US-based mutual funds on the remittance basis, and then redeem one of the funds (under £50K) and bring that money to the UK, what percentage tax will I pay on that money?
Posted Wed, 06 Nov 2024 09:01:37 GMT by HMRC Admin 17 Response

Hi ,
 
As a UK tax resident, you are taxable on your world-wide income and capital gains. 

As you are disposing of an overseas property, you are required to declare the disposal in a self assessment tax return. 

Please have a look at the guidance on private residence relief on helpsheet HS284

(: HS283 Private Residence Relief (2024) ). 


There is a capital gains tax calcultor at :

 Tax when you sell property , to help you work out your gain. 

All of the figures in the calculation must be in GBP sterling. 

You can use an exchange rate in use at the time to conver from the foreign currency. 

Under the terms of Self Assessment, we do not provide an official exchange rate and the onus is on the individual
to use a just and reasonable exchange rate for each acquisition and disposal. 

For your convenience, there are exchange rates at :

webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20231016190054  :

 Exchange rates from HMRC in CSV and XML format  and for older rates at

webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20100202113554:

Exchange rates from HMRC in CSV and XML format   .

You are free to use any of the supplied rates or one of your own choosing.

Thank you .
Posted Wed, 06 Nov 2024 18:54:05 GMT by J Chan
I am a UK tax resident and on domicile status. I intend to sell my overseas property and then transfer the proceeds to the UK. Apart from capital gain tax that I need to pay, do I need to pay any tax for the transfer of such proceeds to the UK? Also, I lived in the above overseas property for around 10 years before I move to live in UK, do I entitle to the Private Residence Relief when I sell such property? Kindly advise.
Posted Tue, 12 Nov 2024 11:45:30 GMT by HMRC Admin 21 Response
Hi J Chan,
You will have to work out if there is a Capital Gains liability, using UK rules for Capital Gains.  
This means that you need to convert the values to GBP sterling, using a just and reasonable exchange rate in use at the time of acquistion and disposal.  The disposal should be reported in a Self Assessment tax return.  
Under the terms of Self Assessment, we do not provide an official exchange rate and the onus is on the individual to use a just and reasonable exchange rate for each acquisition and disposal.  
For your convenience, there are exchange rates at: https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20231016190054/Exchange rates from HMRC in CSV and XML format and for older rates at UK Government Web Archive/ukgwa/20100202113554/Exchange rates from HMRC in CSV and XML format.
You are free to use any of the supplied rates or one of your own choosing.
Thank you.
Posted Tue, 19 Nov 2024 16:26:49 GMT by Jasonrawlins Warren
Hello, I emigrated to the Uk in Sept 2023, and now I want to transfer money £580, 000 from Hong Kong for buying a property in England. Is my savings taxable? Thanks. Jason
Posted Wed, 20 Nov 2024 10:45:02 GMT by HMRC Admin 34 Response
Hi,
There are no tax implications for transferring savings to a UK bank account unless they generate interest or dividends.
These would then potentially be subject to tax.
Further guidance can be found here:
Tax on savings interest
Tax on dividends
Thank you
Posted Sat, 23 Nov 2024 11:51:26 GMT by kai1638
I am planning to move my family to UK in the next year. Is it better for me (tax wise) to sell my property in my current country before moving to UK or move to UK then sell at current country? I believe if I move before I sell then I am liable to pay UK tax (capital gains?) despite having to pay off the mortgage loan? Please advise if it is more favorable to me to sell before I move?
Posted Wed, 27 Nov 2024 02:40:44 GMT by Jade Nguyen
Hello My husband is a UK resident and he is selling a property given as a gift to him by his sister in Vietnam. He would like to send this money by bank transfer to the UK. Would this money be subjected to any tax if he already followed tax rules in Vietnam where the property was. Thank you for any info and advice. Kind regards Jade
Posted Thu, 28 Nov 2024 09:42:03 GMT by HMRC Admin 20 Response
Hi kai1638,
This question is asking for financial advice.  we can only provide general information / guidance in this forum.  
For an answer to a detailed question of this nature, you would need to seek professional advice.
Thank you.
Posted Fri, 29 Nov 2024 10:31:20 GMT by HMRC Admin 21 Response
Hi Jade,
He will need to report the sale of the property to the UK as this is a Capital Gain. Foreign tax credit may be applied in respect of the tax paid abroad to set against the UK tax bill -
Capital Gains Tax: what you pay it on, rates and allowances.
Thank you.
Posted Tue, 03 Dec 2024 14:35:04 GMT by dannys97
Hi, I have inherited property from my father in pakistan who was a british citizen. I am in the process of selling the property and would like to bring the money over to the uk to invest here. what are the tax implications for this as i would like to have everything above board to be able to utilise the money here in the uk.
Posted Wed, 11 Dec 2024 13:30:03 GMT by HMRC Admin 20 Response
Hi,
You would need to work out if you have a capital gain arising from the disposal of this property, using the UK rules.  
You would need to convert the inherited value from Pakistan Rupees to pounds sterling and the disposal value, using exchange rates in use at the time.  
The disposal should be declared in a self assessment tax return, even if no capital gains tax is payable.  
Under the terms of Self Assessment, we do not provide an official exchange rate and the onus is on the individual to use a just and reasonable exchange rate for each acquisition and disposal. For your convenience, there are exchange rates at Exchange rates from HMRC in CSV and XML format and for older rates at Foreign exchange rates and spot rates: 1 January 1989 to 31 March 2009.
You are free to use any of the supplied rates or one of your own choosing. 
Thank you.
 
Posted Sun, 15 Dec 2024 15:56:24 GMT by Farha786 siddique
Good afternoon I am in the process of selling land in Pakistan. How can I bring all the money back in the UK estimated amount around 140k. If I bring it via remitaley would I have to pay tax. Would I have to inform the HMRC about selling the land. Can I gift the money to my children around 50k each, would I still be taxed even if I gift to my children. Can you please advise me. Thank you. 
Posted Tue, 17 Dec 2024 11:45:48 GMT by Guil Marcondes
Hi there, I'm a UK resident; I just finished law school, and after four years of studying and having two kids, I ended up with debts on my credit cards. My father plans to help me by sending the money from where he lives abroad to pay my credit card debts. It will be a one-off in the amount of around £12.000 to pay two of my credit cards. When he transfers this money, he will pay taxes over there already, and it will not be helpful if I need to pay taxes twice. Would that be taxed here, too? Thank you very much for your help.
Posted Tue, 17 Dec 2024 13:38:53 GMT by HMRC Admin 10 Response
Hi
There are no tax implications for transferring savings to a UK bank account unless they generate interest or dividends. 
These would then potentially be subject to tax. 
Further guidance can be found here: 
Tax on savings interest 
Tax on savings interest
Tax on dividends 
Tax on dividends

 
Posted Sun, 05 Jan 2025 12:07:15 GMT by cathbrown50
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Posted Mon, 06 Jan 2025 12:06:38 GMT by Gonzalo NChaim
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Posted Mon, 06 Jan 2025 13:40:51 GMT by Muhamed Elnur
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Posted Wed, 08 Jan 2025 17:49:31 GMT by YX
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