Departing Aus - Becoming a Non-Resident for Tax: CGT
#1
Just Joined
Thread Starter
Joined: Sep 2018
Posts: 4


Hi all,
I've seen that if you become a non-resident for tax purposes, you have to pay CGT on your Australian shares in addition to all overseas assets.
So, for example - if you owned a property in UK/ any where before you moved to Aus that would be subject to CGT on the price difference from date of entry to date you departed Aus (well, in cases such as you've become a citizen in that 10 year period) - all this despite the fact the asset hasn't been sold!
Has anyone had any experience of this? Or more especially the implications of deferring the CGT payment? Thanks in advance
I've seen that if you become a non-resident for tax purposes, you have to pay CGT on your Australian shares in addition to all overseas assets.
So, for example - if you owned a property in UK/ any where before you moved to Aus that would be subject to CGT on the price difference from date of entry to date you departed Aus (well, in cases such as you've become a citizen in that 10 year period) - all this despite the fact the asset hasn't been sold!
Has anyone had any experience of this? Or more especially the implications of deferring the CGT payment? Thanks in advance
#2
Just Joined
Joined: Mar 2023
Posts: 3


Hi all,
I've seen that if you become a non-resident for tax purposes, you have to pay CGT on your Australian shares in addition to all overseas assets.
So, for example - if you owned a property in UK/ any where before you moved to Aus that would be subject to CGT on the price difference from date of entry to date you departed Aus (well, in cases such as you've become a citizen in that 10 year period) - all this despite the fact the asset hasn't been sold!
Has anyone had any experience of this? Or more especially the implications of deferring the CGT payment? Thanks in advance
I've seen that if you become a non-resident for tax purposes, you have to pay CGT on your Australian shares in addition to all overseas assets.
So, for example - if you owned a property in UK/ any where before you moved to Aus that would be subject to CGT on the price difference from date of entry to date you departed Aus (well, in cases such as you've become a citizen in that 10 year period) - all this despite the fact the asset hasn't been sold!
Has anyone had any experience of this? Or more especially the implications of deferring the CGT payment? Thanks in advance
By contrast, you need to declare all your incomes from around the world if you claim to be a tax resident.
Last edited by JMU; Mar 6th 2023 at 8:58 am.