Scottyboi
Well-Known Member
Think he needs to eat a Snickers.
Guess we know who is paying that 2k a week, I'd be pissed off too!
Think he needs to eat a Snickers.
I know a care home that would take them for £750 a week too, but not sure if I should offer the details.Guess we know who is paying that 2k a week, I'd be pissed off too!
The problem isn't house prices beating inflation, it's that wages haven't so houses feel a lot more expensive.I think house prices have shot up a bit more than inflation!
I personally find they vary by areas. London easily requires very deep pockets and a substantial deposit. First time buyers trying to find £400,000 northwards is not easy.The problem isn't house prices beating inflation, it's that wages haven't so houses feel a lot more expensive.
Very few people 'buy' a house, they get a mortgage, so a bit like car leases, people end up with more than they can really afford, especially when interest rates were 1 or 2%. Now they're back to closer to a historic average, I suspect house prices won't move for a few years whilst wages catch up
That's London though. Going waaay off topic, but it's what happens when you put so much of the economy in one area. There will be lots of parts of Lancashire, Cumbria, Wales, the North east etc when you can still get a perfectly good terrace for well under £100k. There's lots of bits of Greater Manchester where you can do it for under £150k.I personally find they vary by areas. London easily requires very deep pockets and a substantial deposit. First time buyers trying to find £400,000 northwards is not easy.
Men with trades in their fifties still lived in shares and even above pubs when I was there.
Bollocks.I know a care home that would take them for £750 a week too, but not sure if I should offer the details.
Not me.Guess we know who is paying that 2k a week, I'd be pissed off too!
Are you okay?Bollocks.
I know shit holes that would take people for that but not full on dementia patients with a colostomy bag requiring 24 hour care.
Nice edit of your post here too.Then your ignorance is outstanding.
[The care home we would put her in, if she was willing to go, charges just £98K year.
What you think things should cost is irrelevant.
If you want your family to have the best care it will cost an arm and a leg.
Suck it up.]
I can tell you that I had a client in the U.K. who was gifted a large sum by their mother and they went back 8 years when it came time for her to be moved into a nursing home.Most local authorities work on a 6-month period. Anything transferred prior to 6 months tends to be disregarded, but I suspect in practice it will differ from LA to LA. Might be harder in your case now that she's already in care.
Finally had a little time to process your bullshit.Bollocks.
I know shit holes that would take people for that but not full on dementia patients with a colostomy bag requiring 24 hour care.
Gifts given are free from IHT if you survive for 7 years.What's the crack with this 7 year thing then?
If your parents give you POA and then die 7+ years later, are you immune from inheritance tax? The rich don't want normal folk knowing their game.
What's the best fiddle to get out of paying care home fees? Other than giving them a bottle of pills to play with; which is what I've been instructed to do by my mother.
Without getting political, it's a joke. We have my wife's parents living with us (83 & 80). One has dementia, the other has had major cancer surgery. It's a joke that the money they have realised from the sale of their house has to go towards social care (if and when that happens) after c.50 years of them paying taxes.I can tell you that I had a client in the U.K. who was gifted a large sum by their mother and they went back 8 years when it came time for her to be moved into a nursing home.
They may *usually* go back six months but there is no time limit and the person gifting has the onus on them to prove the gift wasn’t to avoid paying fees rather than the local authority proving that it was.
My Grandma’s funeral is next week. I don’t know how many of her careers will come, but a fair few asked me personally to be kept informed of when it would be.My nan was in a home for a length of time with dementia before she passed away. Three of the girls who’d cared for her took time off to come to her funeral.
I’m in total agreement. Work and save all your life and it’s eaten up. Do fuck all, never work, never save and you’ll be looked after. It’s a disgrace.Without getting political, it's a joke. We have my wife's parents living with us (83 & 80). One has dementia, the other has had major cancer surgery. It's a joke that the money they have realised from the sale of their house has to go towards social care (if and when that happens) after c.50 years of them paying taxes.
I'm just going to tell my kids to take me to the bottom of the garden and shoot me if that ever becomes a choice I have to make.
I think 7 years is the limit if you want to avoid your children getting stung for tax, start giving them their inheritance now. You can gift £3k per annum anyway.I can tell you that I had a client in the U.K. who was gifted a large sum by their mother and they went back 8 years when it came time for her to be moved into a nursing home.
They may *usually* go back six months but there is no time limit and the person gifting has the onus on them to prove the gift wasn’t to avoid paying fees rather than the local authority proving that it was.
No that’s inheritance tax, not care fees avoidance.I think 7 years is the limit if you want to avoid your children getting stung for tax, start giving them their inheritance now. You can gift £3k per annum anyway.