Capital gains tax on the rise – behind the headlines
Capital gains tax raised £16.7 billion in 2021/22, according to HMRC – a 15% increase over the previous year. But what lies behind these statistics?
Capital gains tax raised £16.7 billion in 2021/22, according to HMRC – a 15% increase over the previous year. But what lies behind these statistics?
Source: HMRC
In early August media outlets reported that the government had raised a record amount of capital gains tax (CGT) last year. There was no doubting the numbers, as they came from the body collecting the tax – HMRC. However, the detail behind the statistics is in some ways more interesting than the headlines.
If your reaction to these figures is that you never pay CGT and never will, you may need to think again. In 2021/22, the annual exempt amount – the net amount of gains a person could make free of CGT in a tax year – was £12,300. In the current tax year, the exempt amount is £6,000 and from 6 April 2024 it will halve to just £3,000. When these changes were announced last November, HMRC estimated that in this tax year around half a million individuals and trusts could be affected. You too might become part of the CGT statistics.
Tax treatment varies according to individual circumstances and is subject to change.
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