Prior to 6 April 2025, UK resident individuals who were not domiciled or deemed domiciled in the UK had the choice to pay tax on:
the remittance basis 鈥� broadly meaning that UK tax was only paid on foreign income and gains to the extent that these were brought to the UK in the tax year, or
the arising basis 鈥� meaning UK tax was payable on worldwide income and gains arising in the tax year
From 6 April 2025, the remittance basis of taxation is repealed as a consequence of the abolition of the concept of domicile. This is replaced with a regime linked to the number of years of UK residency, which is colloquially referred to as the foreign income and gains regime (FIG regime). Although this is not a statutory term, it is used in this guidance note as a useful shorthand to reference the new regime. This regime is open to anyone who meets the residence conditions, including those who would have been considered
Real estate investment trusts (REITs)Introduction to REITsA real estate investment trust (REIT) is in fact not a trust at all, it is a company which qualifies for special tax treatment under CTA 2010, Part 12. REITs are similar in many ways to collective fund vehicles (such as unit trusts) in that
Simple assessmentsFrom 2016/17 onwards, HMRC has the power to make a 鈥榮imple assessment鈥� of the taxpayer鈥檚 income tax and / or capital gains tax liability outside of the self assessment system. As HMRC already receives significant amounts of information on the income received and tax paid by
Sales, advertising and marketingExpenditure on sales, advertising and marketing activities may include amounts which are disallowable for the purposes of calculating trading profits. This may be because the expenditure is:鈥apital in nature (see the Capital vs revenue expenditure guidance note)鈥ot