Go Back  British Expats > Living & Moving Abroad > Canada
Reload this Page >

Capital Gains Question

Wikiposts

Capital Gains Question

Thread Tools
 
Old Jul 30th 2012 | 7:56 pm
  #1  
Thread Starter
Forum Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 51
From: Whistler
jonesyp is an unknown quantity at this point
Default Capital Gains Question

Hello all,

I have recently sold a property in the uk and am just wondering how much i would need to pay.
I am currently a permanant resident of canada. below is my timeline

1999 Jun - Aquired house in uk
2005 Nov - moved to canada
2009 Dec - Became PR of canada
2012 Jul - Sold House in uk

the house value has not changed in the last 5 years.

i have read a few things with people saying that i only take in to account when i became resident.

some saying it all depends on currency etc.

Thanks for all who can help

Jonesyp
 
Old Jul 31st 2012 | 2:41 am
  #2  
 
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 12,830
Aviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond reputeAviator has a reputation beyond repute
Default Re: Capital Gains Question

Originally Posted by jonesyp
Hello all,

I have recently sold a property in the uk and am just wondering how much i would need to pay.
I am currently a permanant resident of canada. below is my timeline

1999 Jun - Aquired house in uk
2005 Nov - moved to canada
2009 Dec - Became PR of canada
2012 Jul - Sold House in uk

the house value has not changed in the last 5 years.

i have read a few things with people saying that i only take in to account when i became resident.

some saying it all depends on currency etc.

Thanks for all who can help

Jonesyp
The difference in value between when the day you became a tax resident of Canada and what you sold it for.

This may be different to when you became PR, quite possibly 2005 to 2012.

Hopefully you had a valuation letter done before you came to Canada to demonstrate the value, this should be calculated in CDN$, you can get an approximate rate from Bank of Canada website.

If house worth $200,000 the day you became tax resident and you sold it for $300,000 you would be most likely liable for a capital gains tax on $50,000. All values are calculated in CDN$ prevailing at the time you became tax resident and the day you sold the house. GBP has dropped a lot since 2005 so your CDN$ equivalent could well be a lot less than is was in 2005.
If in 2005 the FX was $2.25 and today it is $1.60, a £200k house in 2005 would have been $450000, today if you had sold for $300,000 you would have got $480,000, so a gain of only $30k, of which $15k is taxable as CGT.

Valuations are not what you think it was, CRA require evidence of how much it was worth in 2005 and what you sold it for, if you cannot provide this, they may well re assess and make their own valuation up if they think you are way off. You may be well advised to get an accountant to help you file your 2012 return.

Last edited by Aviator; Jul 31st 2012 at 2:48 am.
 
Old Jul 31st 2012 | 9:06 am
  #3  
 
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 14,227
Alan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond reputeAlan2005 has a reputation beyond repute
Default Re: Capital Gains Question

Originally Posted by Aviator
Valuations are not what you think it was, CRA require evidence of how much it was worth in 2005 and what you sold it for, if you cannot provide this, they may well re assess and make their own valuation up if they think you are way off. You may be well advised to get an accountant to help you file your 2012 return.
If the OP doesn't have a 2005 valuation, then they might be able to use information from the land registry if a similar house in that area sold (personally I'd say this is better indicator of price than an estate agent valuation). It's worth a look on something like mouseprice at any rate.
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off



Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Your Privacy Choices

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.