Chaka wrote:Point 5,
Why are they charging 30% on rental income from the estate of a deceased landlord?
Also can someone explain this statement
"Principal Loan repayment is a capital item and not an allowable deduction"
If it is not allowable then this will discourage
investing in rental houses?
If I use my own funds to put up rental houses,do I still pay tax even though I have not recovered the initial cash investment?
Ans 1: Because the income no longer belongs to an individual person, but to an estate which is a corporate entity in the eyes of the law.
Ans 2: You seem to misunderstand the meaning of profit. If you buy a brand new house and pay for it in cash outright and rent it out, then you start earning a profit immediately! This is simply the rent collected minus any costs incurred in maintaining the house (repairs, and provision of services). You pay tax on this profit.
However, if you sell the house to another person at a higher price than you bought it, then your profit is Selling price minus buying price; minus other transaction costs [eg legal fees]. But in this case, you could argue that the difference is a capital gain [because you did nothing to the house apart from hold it and then sell it]....and this would be tax-free.
Ans 3: Yes; if you buy a house cash and start renting it, you start paying tax immediately as explained above