Capital Gains Tax (CGT) is due when you sell or give away an asset that's gone up in value. The rules changed significantly in October 2024 and the annual tax-free allowance has been cut sharply over three years — CGT is now a tax many more people actually pay.
The annual exempt amount
Only gains above the £3,000 annual allowance are taxable. The allowance used to be £12,300 in 2022/23, halved to £6,000 in 2023/24, and halved again to £3,000 for 2024/25 onwards. Trusts get half the individual allowance.
CGT rates (post-October 2024)
Rates are determined by what you're selling and your total income. The 30 October 2024 Budget raised non-property rates to match property rates. Disposals before that date used the older lower rates — transactions straddling the date split.
| Asset type | Basic rate | Higher/add rate |
|---|---|---|
| Shares, crypto, other | 18% | 24% |
| Residential property | 18% | 24% |
| Business Asset Disposal Relief | 14% (rising to 18% in 2026/27) | — |
| Carried interest (private equity) | 32% | 32% |
Your basic/higher rate is determined by stacking the gain on top of your income. A £20,000 gain on top of a £45,000 salary uses some basic-rate band (£5,270 at 18%) and the rest at higher rate (£14,730 at 24%).
Residential property — the 60-day rule
Selling a UK residential property that isn't your main home? You must file and pay within 60 days of completion. This is a standalone return, not part of Self Assessment — though the gain also appears on your annual return.
- Your main home (Principal Private Residence) is normally fully exempt.
- If you let out a former main home, PPR relief covers the period of actual occupation plus the final 9 months.
- Second homes, buy-to-lets, and inherited properties sold are all caught.
- The 60-day deadline runs from completion date, not exchange. Missed returns attract £100 penalties that escalate.
Crypto
Cryptocurrency is treated as an asset, not currency. Every disposal is potentially taxable:
- Selling crypto for GBP — CGT event.
- Swapping one crypto for another — CGT event (common surprise). Even ETH → wBTC triggers a disposal.
- Using crypto to buy goods/services — CGT event.
- Sending crypto to another wallet you own — NOT a disposal.
- Gifting to a spouse — not a disposal (no gain, no loss).
- Gifting to anyone else — CGT event at market value on the day.
HMRC is increasingly active in crypto. Centralised exchanges (Coinbase, Binance UK) report to HMRC. The Crypto Disclosure Facility exists specifically to let people come forward before HMRC finds them.
Using losses
Capital losses are valuable. Rules:
- Losses in a tax year are set off against gains in the same year before the £3,000 allowance.
- Unused losses carry forward indefinitely — but must be claimed within 4 years of the loss year.
- Losses on "negligible value" shares can be claimed even without selling, if you can prove the share is worthless.
Planning
- Use both spouses' allowances — transfer assets between spouses (no CGT) to use two £3,000 allowances.
- Time disposals across tax years — sell some in March, rest in April to use two allowances.
- Hold inside an ISA/SIPP — no CGT at all.
- Hold until death — assets are rebased at probate value and CGT history is wiped (though they may face IHT at 40%).
- Claim PPR relief correctly — elect which property is your main home within 2 years of owning a second if it matters.