I5.221 Lifetime termination of QIIP—general
Lifetime charges on settled property that is subject to qualifying interest in possession (QIIP) are imposed by a set of rules which are separate from but parallel to those relating to dispositions of free estate. These rules provide that a disposition of all or part (I5.223) of a QIIP is not a transfer of value by the trustees but is treated as the coming to an end of the interest in possession. This termination is treated as being a transfer of value by the person beneficially entitled to the interest (often called the 'life tenant'), the value transferred being the value of the property in which his interest subsisted1.
A lifetime termination of the beneficiary's interest will sometimes be treated as a chargeable lifetime transfer (CLT) by the former life tenant (where, say, the trust fund continues on further trusts).
A transfer will however be a potentially exempt transfer (PET) where:
- Ìý
•ÌýÌýÌýÌý the life tenant gives it up in favour of another individual (or a disabled trust; see I5.207),
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Web page updated on 24 Aug 2024 12:23