support@kopiandproperty.com

Advertisements

Advertisement Banner

RPGT is to be calculated based on value from year 2000, not before.

I think my good friend in Penang will be slightly happier. He was asking me about the properties he acquired long ago which he needed to dispose now for his daughter’s tertiary education. He will ‘lose’a lot due to the sudden announcement of the 5 percent Real Property Gains Tax regardless of how long one has kept the property. Before this, RPGT will no longer be charged as long as one has held the property for over 5 years. It was a cooling measure to keep speculators out of the property market previously. Here’s how you calculate the RPGT
Article in NST here. Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said that the RPGT valuation on property would only be calculated from the year 2000 onwards, says Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng. He said, “There were parties that raised concerns that if the property was bought since 1960 and later sold, how much is the tax that they need to pay. Therefore, the ministry had set the date of valuation to begin from the year 2000 despite the land being owned since 1960. It would only be valued from 2000.” This was to provide clarity to all the feedback from concerned property owners who have bought and owned land extending decades before 2000.
By the way, this is NOT for properties bought BEFORE 2000. This meant that all properties regardless of when they were bought will use year 2000 as the valuation year for the RPGT calculation. Technically, one should ‘save’ a lot from this versus if year 1988 was used for example. Although this does not take away the thinking that the government is doing this for more revenue (SST vs GST), it’s important to note that this may also be done in conjunction with the measures to reduce the current unsold properties which are in the market. Owners who decided not to sell may also be reducing the supply of available units for sale in the market. Personally, I hope this is NOT going to be forever because there is really no justification to this. Many investors may now stop buying properties because now there’s an extra hurdle that will never go away. Happy buying.
Please LIKE kopiandproperty.com FB page or Sign Up for free to get daily updates about the property market. Else, follow me on Twitter here.
written on 23 Nov 2018
Next suggested article:  Stamp Duty for unsold property and RPGT for all

**In Article Advertisements Banner

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Few seconds to subscribe for FREE and get property investment tips, latest financial and property news and more.

Join 2,882 other subscribers.
Motion arrow towards right
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Motion arrow towards right
Charles Tan The Founder The Writer Kopiandproperty
Charles Tan

Charles is Founder of kopiandproperty.com He writes from his investment experience for the the past 20 years in investments including property, stock, unit trust and more as well as readings and conversations with many property gurus in the industry. kopiandproperty.com is an independent property blog which is not affiliated to any media company, property developer or even real estate agencies.

Advertisements

Advertisement Banner

Facebook Comment

Table of Contents

Most Recent Posts

Discover more from kopiandproperty.com

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

join the family

Like us for daily investment news and more

Hit the like