I doubt that a mortgage company would accept a joint mortgage with only one name on the deeds, they need to have a recognised interest in the whole house, not just half of it.
first ring the mortgage company and find out
and make sure that the fella who says yeah or nay
has the power to do so ( = is not a skool leva in the front hall)
so it is buy to let so it is not your first house
so it is taxable
the charge is gain = value now minus cost
half the gain as there are two
take away 11000 - your CGT allowance
multiply by .2 or .4 or whatever your highest rate of tax is
( or the current CGT rate)
can you elect to roll the gain over ?
pay more later? on disposal sale?
no not in this case
so suppose the gain is--- £100k hur hur hur
( not the sale price but the sale now price minus the price you bought) - half is 50k
take away 11k is 39 k
so the tax is 2k or 4 k - which is OK innit
anyway that is my opinion
and needless to say cassa
I am not a CGT exprt or else I would not spend my evenings on AB
It's a straighforward gift. There shouldn't be any CGT.
Best thing to do is leave the legal title in your joint names and do a Declaration of Trust saying that you jointly hold it for you absolutely. No need for the DoT to appear on the title, althought I might enter a Form A restriction.