Please note that the below is just for reference, as indexation and taper relief were abolished in April 2008.
Taper relief was introduced with effect from 6th April 1998. Its purpose was similar to indexation, in that they both aimed to reduce the taxable gain when you sold an asset to account for the effect of inflation.
But there was a critical difference. Whereas indexation worked by increasing the base cost of an asset, taper relief worked by reducing the gain by 5% a year, for every year it was held regardless of the base cost. This is significant because if the base cost of an asset was zero, indexation did not help. Taper relief, on the other hand, did.
| No. Complete years after 5.4.98 for which asset has been held | % of Gain Chargeable |
|---|---|
| 0 | 100 |
| 1 | 100 |
| 2 | 100 |
| 3 | 95 |
| 4 | 90 |
| 5 | 85 |
| 6 | 80 |
| 7 | 75 |
| 8 | 70 |
| 9 | 65 |
| >10 | 60 |
Example
Note that in the above example, taper relief was available even though the shares had not been held for three years, because they were owned on 17th March 1998.
Taper relief applies to each individual share acquisition, so if you dispose of a holding built up over a number of years after 5 April 1998 then the gain on each acquisition has to be calculated individually and taper relief applied to each one individually. The good news is that a holding which you had at 5 April 1998 can be treated as one element, as shown above.
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