Accounting & tax

Capital gains tax (CGT): Guidance on rates & allowances

An accountant and business owner discussing capital tax gains allowances and calculations surrounded by documents, computers and calculators

Capital Gains Tax (CGT) is a tax on the profit you make when you sell, give away or exchange your business, assuming it has increased in value since you set it up.

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This post was published in 2018, it’s useful for understanding concepts and will be updated in future but please seek the government site for up to date information.

How it works

If you’re selling an asset – such as a business, property, shares or business goodwill – any increase in the asset’s value since you bought it is called the capital gain. It is only the profit or capital gain that is taxed, not the total amount of money you receive from the sale.

You must pay tax on any gains you make in a year, although you are allowed to keep up to a certain amount – known as the Annual Exemption Amount – before the tax kicks in. Capital Gains Tax is also charged on the sale of business assets such as shops, factories, workshops, fixtures and fittings, plant and machinery.

The practicalities

Things to consider

As well as Entrepreneurs Relief, there are three other types of Capital Gains Tax relief that you may be entitled to:

Top tip

If you use part of your home for your business and pay business rates on that part, then you may have to pay Capital Gains Tax on that proportion of the gain when you sell your house.

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Case study

David Hathiramani is the co-founder of A Suit That Fits, an online custom menswear company which has a turnover of £3 million. He thinks the Entrepreneurs Relief provision, which allows entrepreneurs to pay just 10% on their first £10 million of capital gains, is a great way of encouraging entrepreneurs to start and grow businesses in the UK. He says: “If this encourages people to start up businesses and do their own thing, then that is good for the country”. – Since this example was added as is updated previously in this article, the entrepreneurs relief limit has dropped to £1 million.

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