As sole executor, I’m confused by the differing legal advice I’ve received to date on how I should ‘buy out’ my fellow beneficiaries from the property in my father’s estate.
Background: 3 sibling beneficiaries - each inherits different proportions of total estate. Main asset is a house, plus other significant cash assets. As executor & main beneficiary, I want to keep the house, ie ‘buy out’ the others by giving them their share of estate in cash - topped up with some of my own funds. They are in agreement with this. But how to do it correctly?
I had been told previously (by Which? Legal & Money advisers) that I was effectively ‘buying’ the house from the estate - & the ‘price paid’ was equal to the top-up amount from my own funds. This top-up amount would then be subject to stamp duty. However, when consulting a local solicitor about my own will, they advised differently. They said that as a beneficiary there is no house sale or stamp duty involved. Instead, they advised that when I have the Grant I can simply gather assets, prepare/agree estate accounts with siblings, then give them their share in cash (plus my top-up) & finally transfer the house into my name.
So which advice is correct? I simply want to do it legally, fairly - & not get a nasty tax bill down the line if I do it wrong! The house will not be my main residence - my spouse & I own our own house too. Longer-term (post pandemic) we plan to sell both houses, but not for a year or two until things hopefully settle down.
I’m quite happy to pay for the relevant advice to do it right, but not sure if I need a solicitor, tax accountant or IFA!
Please point me in the right direction if you can - thanks.
Background: 3 sibling beneficiaries - each inherits different proportions of total estate. Main asset is a house, plus other significant cash assets. As executor & main beneficiary, I want to keep the house, ie ‘buy out’ the others by giving them their share of estate in cash - topped up with some of my own funds. They are in agreement with this. But how to do it correctly?
I had been told previously (by Which? Legal & Money advisers) that I was effectively ‘buying’ the house from the estate - & the ‘price paid’ was equal to the top-up amount from my own funds. This top-up amount would then be subject to stamp duty. However, when consulting a local solicitor about my own will, they advised differently. They said that as a beneficiary there is no house sale or stamp duty involved. Instead, they advised that when I have the Grant I can simply gather assets, prepare/agree estate accounts with siblings, then give them their share in cash (plus my top-up) & finally transfer the house into my name.
So which advice is correct? I simply want to do it legally, fairly - & not get a nasty tax bill down the line if I do it wrong! The house will not be my main residence - my spouse & I own our own house too. Longer-term (post pandemic) we plan to sell both houses, but not for a year or two until things hopefully settle down.
I’m quite happy to pay for the relevant advice to do it right, but not sure if I need a solicitor, tax accountant or IFA!
Please point me in the right direction if you can - thanks.
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