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Reeves plan to tax houses over 500k PART TWO

442 replies

soupyspoon · 19/08/2025 15:23

I am not the OP from the OP!

OP posts:
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12
reversegear · 27/08/2025 04:33

SpaceRaccoon · 26/08/2025 07:04

Oh great!! I live in a tiny cottage with 1.6 acres.

Same. Steep ground as well, of no commercial benefit.

Same there is no access so we couldn’t sell or remove the land. Poor farmers again.

Theolittle · 27/08/2025 07:49

echt · 26/08/2025 02:37

It will definitely stuff the elderly unless it replaces Council Tax. One effect will be to have them move out of the massive houses they all live in and downsize.
Away from friends, familiar surroundings, doctors, shops, etc.
There are reasons why some local councils try to keep older people in their homes, with modifications. It's cheaper and they live longer.

Oh, and the houses they'll seek are exactly the starter homes wanted by younger families.

The downsizing will kill off quite a few of them, but they're old, so who cares? Fuck 'em.

It only apples to new house sales, not where stamp duty has already been paid, so will not generally affect older people

The council can’t make people move home but they can help you stay at home rather than needing to go into residential care. Residential care costs (taxpayers ultimately) a fortune

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 10:42

Theolittle · 27/08/2025 07:49

It only apples to new house sales, not where stamp duty has already been paid, so will not generally affect older people

The council can’t make people move home but they can help you stay at home rather than needing to go into residential care. Residential care costs (taxpayers ultimately) a fortune

Not if you’ve got a house to sell to pay for it.

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 10:46

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 10:42

Not if you’ve got a house to sell to pay for it.

Rightly so.

GasPanic · 27/08/2025 11:21

echt · 26/08/2025 02:37

It will definitely stuff the elderly unless it replaces Council Tax. One effect will be to have them move out of the massive houses they all live in and downsize.
Away from friends, familiar surroundings, doctors, shops, etc.
There are reasons why some local councils try to keep older people in their homes, with modifications. It's cheaper and they live longer.

Oh, and the houses they'll seek are exactly the starter homes wanted by younger families.

The downsizing will kill off quite a few of them, but they're old, so who cares? Fuck 'em.

Since the elderly have a disproportionate amount of housing wealth relative to other age demographics, any increases on tax on property value is bound to fall more on the elderly. It's pretty much inevitable.

Downsizing at the moment does seem to be quite tax efficient in the respect when you downsize you will spend less on stamp duty or the new place than the old.

I wonder if reducing the zero rate relief on inheritance tax for housing would be a better way of raising money. You could make some other mods to incentivise it. But whenever anyone talks about modifying inheritance tax the whole country seems to go beserk, so probably a non starter politically.

Theolittle · 27/08/2025 19:28

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 10:42

Not if you’ve got a house to sell to pay for it.

True, but a couple of years in care and the house value is soon spent, and the Local Authority pays the rest. There aren’t any stats on how much is self funded and how much paid by LAs

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 19:36

Theolittle · 27/08/2025 19:28

True, but a couple of years in care and the house value is soon spent, and the Local Authority pays the rest. There aren’t any stats on how much is self funded and how much paid by LAs

It’s around half according to this at a cost of around £60k a year. The average stay is about two years.

https://www.carehome.co.uk/advice/who-pays-what

https://www.carehome.co.uk/advice/who-pays-what

Theolittle · 27/08/2025 19:45

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 19:36

It’s around half according to this at a cost of around £60k a year. The average stay is about two years.

https://www.carehome.co.uk/advice/who-pays-what

Thanks for that. Costs a fortune whoever pays for it!

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 20:08

Theolittle · 27/08/2025 19:28

True, but a couple of years in care and the house value is soon spent, and the Local Authority pays the rest. There aren’t any stats on how much is self funded and how much paid by LAs

Unfortunately there are stats on how long the average pensioner lasts in a home though
Thats two years !

Let’s not forget those paying whilst there are also subsidising those paid for by the council. So the money runs down a lot quicker aswell

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 20:11

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 20:08

Unfortunately there are stats on how long the average pensioner lasts in a home though
Thats two years !

Let’s not forget those paying whilst there are also subsidising those paid for by the council. So the money runs down a lot quicker aswell

The money runs down at exactly the same rate regardless. The care homes that don’t accept local authority funded residents are the most expensive ones.

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 20:14

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 20:11

The money runs down at exactly the same rate regardless. The care homes that don’t accept local authority funded residents are the most expensive ones.

Edited

However most do accept those funded by the authority funded

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 20:26

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 20:14

However most do accept those funded by the authority funded

Not round here. The population here is quite old and most care homes have waiting lists of self funders. There’s no need for them to accept council referrals so they don’t.

DrPrunesqualer · 27/08/2025 20:27

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 20:26

Not round here. The population here is quite old and most care homes have waiting lists of self funders. There’s no need for them to accept council referrals so they don’t.

That’s not the norm though.

Most do accept both

Papyrophile · 27/08/2025 20:46

In Devon and Cornwall, there aren't many luxurious posh UC care homes. My DMIL was horrified when she looked at the options nearby. Nobody played bridge (although she couldn't manage it either by then) but she still self funded to the tune of £1250 per week , to subsidise the LA rates of 700 per week.

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 20:48

I think most people are beyond even knowing what bridge is by the time a care home is appropriate!

Papyrophile · 27/08/2025 21:08

DMIL (who played to a very high county standard apparently and who could count what cards had fallen even into the days when she could not have recalled the name of the PM) was adamant about it. To my shame, I let her get away with it too long and I probably should have done more to ease my DH's conscience about looking after his ma.

But she was never coming to live with us because I cleaned her up enough times when I visited. I was very fond of of her, and happy to help her shower and get properly clean, but it became increasingly horrible. She hated every indignity, but when you are 94 and physically frail and all your friends are dead, and the last two people you don't mind intimate care from are your daughter and daughter-in-law, and they are not close at hand all the time. It was awful for her. I want to go before I get to that stage.

BIossomtoes · 27/08/2025 23:19

Papyrophile · 27/08/2025 21:08

DMIL (who played to a very high county standard apparently and who could count what cards had fallen even into the days when she could not have recalled the name of the PM) was adamant about it. To my shame, I let her get away with it too long and I probably should have done more to ease my DH's conscience about looking after his ma.

But she was never coming to live with us because I cleaned her up enough times when I visited. I was very fond of of her, and happy to help her shower and get properly clean, but it became increasingly horrible. She hated every indignity, but when you are 94 and physically frail and all your friends are dead, and the last two people you don't mind intimate care from are your daughter and daughter-in-law, and they are not close at hand all the time. It was awful for her. I want to go before I get to that stage.

Me too. In fact I plan to off myself if I get a diagnosis of dementia. A bottle of vodka and plenty of pills should do the job nicely. Unless I can get hold of some heroin, that would be a relatively nice way to go.

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