Please let me know what you think...
Thanks
p.s. the minimum period, before you can sell without having to worry about tax was 6 months wasn't it?
WoodYouLike said:Don't think he can touch you, but on the other hand you will pay VAT on every item/service you buy to revamp the house.
So if you're thinking of making a 'living' out of property development why not become a proper company, VAT-registered and the buying and selling process of the houses will become part of you business: no Capital Gain tax (just Corporate Tax if you make enough profit)
Yes of course.hermes said:And income tax.
yes, Kent, that brings happy memories, did my degree over there, in Canterbury... thanks, I may give it a try, may be I'll move back to Kent when the time's right.WoodYouLike said:div69, there's a lot of free advice (and sometimes free money!) out there. Try a Business Link (not sure where you are based, but Business Link Kent has been very helpfull to us in the beginning). Also, if you're from around here (Kent) I can recommend a really good accountant/business adviser who will help you out truly, not just sending invoices everytime you call him![]()
div69 said:Just curious about how this works. Lets suppose I am willing to buy a house do it up then 6 months later sell it. As it is my main residence I'm not going to pay capital gains tax on the profit. Then I move on to the next one for 6 months and so on until I'm tired of doing it. Can the taxman tell me I cannot do that or it is perfectly within the rules?
Please let me know what you think...
Thanks
p.s. the minimum period, before you can sell without having to worry about tax was 6 months wasn't it?
Apart from advice, they can find you free training and grants, where available. I still use ours from time to time after 7 years trading.WoodYouLike said:Try a Business Link (not sure where you are based, but Business Link Kent has been very helpfull to us in the beginning).![]()

pickles said:If you do it often enough the revenue will say you are trading and tax you accordingly. I don't know exactly under what schedule but I have seen it happen. You might get away with it a couple of times but they will investigate you if you keep doing it.
Don't under estimate the Revenue they are very good at what they do
not bad at all m8ty, for a bit of weekend work...it would be nice to drop it to every 6 months though, won't it?joe-90 said:I've been buying and renovating for ages. The trick is that I have one property as my principal residence and my partner has one as hers.
We renovate them and resell after about 3 to 4 years and do it all again.
We make about £40 - 50k tax free each year. Not bad for a bit of weekend work.
Never had a problem with the tax man. Many people move on every 3 to 4 years.
joe
div69 said:pickles said:If you do it often enough the revenue will say you are trading and tax you accordingly. I don't know exactly under what schedule but I have seen it happen. You might get away with it a couple of times but they will investigate you if you keep doing it.
Don't under estimate the Revenue they are very good at what they do
I was looking for a similar comment (from the other side of the coin), thanks for that pickles.
Well, I don't know much about taxes and don't even want to try to under/over estimate the Revenue. All I know is that mostly money make this world ticking and that the Revenue sets the rules how to get it from us.
I liked what that accountant said on that TV program("No tax please I'm a millionaire") few weeks back, he said(paraphrased): "I do nothing illegal, I follow their rules, I simply have better strategy playing the game".
Did you see that program, I found it very interesting? Anyway, I haven't read the tax rules yet, but suspect it won't be an easy read, that's why asked you guys to share your views and experiences. If you say you've seen it happen it means there is a condition written somewhere, so it would be nice to know where to look for it.![]()