Revenue Note for Guidance
This section grants exemption from capital acquisitions tax for compensation and damages, winnings from betting, lotteries, etc., certain payments in bankruptcy matters, certain normal and reasonable payments within the family, certain payments to incapacitated individuals and normal and reasonable payments from trusts towards the support, maintenance or education of minor orphaned children of the disponer.
Compensation or damages for the following are exempt from tax:
It is not required that compensation or damages be awarded by a court. It is sufficient that the benefit be received by way of bona fide compensation or damages, whether awarded by a court or agreed by compromise.
(1)(c), (ca) Bona fide winnings from wagers, lotteries, etc. are exempt from tax as are payments from the competition “Your Country, Your Call” launched by the President on 17 February 2010.
(1)(d) Any benefit arising out of—
is also exempt from gift or inheritance tax.
(1)(e) Gift or inheritance tax will not be payable on:
of an arranging debtor, to enable him/her to fulfil a proposal being made by him/her under section 87 of the Bankruptcy Act 1988 for the future payment or compromise of his/her debts where such proposal is—
This deals with a situation similar to that dealt with in subsection (1)(d).
(2) Any payments made for the benefit of a dependent which could reasonably be described as normal maintenance and education expenses are exempt from tax. The payments which come within the scope of the exemption are payments which are part of the normal expenditure of the disponer and are reasonable having regard to that disponer’s financial circumstances generally. Post FA 2014 the recipients covered are—
(3) The receipt by a permanently incapacitated individual of funds which are held on a qualifying trust, or of income deriving from funds held on such a trust, is not subject to capital acquisitions tax.
A qualifying trust is a trust which has been established by deed:
(4) The receipt by a minor child/child of a civil partner or also, post FA 2014, by a child/child of a civil partner up to the age of 25 if in full-time education or by a child who, regardless of age, is permanently incapacitated by reason of physical or mental infirmity of money or money’s worth for support, maintenance or education from a deceased parent/civil partner, where the other parent/civil partner is also deceased, will not be regarded as a gift or inheritance on condition that:
Relevant Date: Finance Act 2015