How to reduce capital gains tax
- Nic Round: Chartered Wealth Manager

- Feb 13
- 3 min read
Updated: 1 day ago

How can I reduce capital gains tax?
In the UK, capital gains tax (CGT) applies to the profit you make when selling certain assets. While the tax cannot always be eliminated, there are legitimate ways to reduce capital gains tax through allowances, timing and available reliefs.
Behind this question are often practical concerns:
Can I lower the tax bill legally?
Should I delay the sale?
Are there allowances I haven’t used?
Is there a smarter way to structure this?
Understanding how capital gains tax works is the starting point. Planning before selling is often more effective than reacting afterwards.
Use your annual capital gains tax allowance
Each individual has an annual CGT allowance.
If your total gains in a tax year fall within that allowance, no capital gains tax is due.
If your gains exceed it, only the amount above the allowance is taxable.
For example:
Gain on sale: £30,000
Annual allowance: £6,000
Taxable gain: £24,000
Using the allowance each year where appropriate can reduce the overall tax paid over time.
Consider the timing of the sale
Capital gains tax is calculated within a tax year.
Spreading disposals across two tax years may allow you to use two annual allowances.
For example:
Sell part of an investment in March
Sell the remainder in April (new tax year)
This approach may reduce the total taxable gain in any one year.
Timing should be guided by broader financial planning, not tax alone.
Transfer assets between spouses or civil partners
Transfers between spouses or civil partners are usually free from capital gains tax at the point of transfer.
This means:
Assets can sometimes be transferred to a spouse before sale
Both individuals can use their annual CGT allowances
For example:
A £40,000 gain owned by one spouse
Transferred and split equally
Two £20,000 gains
Two annual allowances used
This can reduce the overall taxable amount.
Offset capital losses
If you have realised capital losses in the same or previous tax years, these may be offset against gains.
For example:
Gain: £35,000
Capital loss carried forward: £10,000
Net gain: £25,000
Only the net gain above the annual allowance is taxed.
Keeping records of losses is important.
Consider available reliefs
Certain reliefs may reduce capital gains tax, depending on circumstances.
For example:
Private Residence Relief on your main home
Business Asset Disposal Relief for qualifying business sales
Eligibility depends on specific conditions and timing.
Reliefs should be confirmed before assuming they apply.
A simple example
Imagine:
You sell shares with a gain of £50,000
You are a higher-rate taxpayer
CGT rate on shares is 20%
Without planning:
Taxable gain after £6,000 allowance = £44,000
20% tax = £8,800
If you:
Transfer half to your spouse
Both use annual allowances
Taxable gains may reduce significantly.
The principle is not avoidance.It is lawful use of available allowances.
The behavioural layer
Often the real question is not technical.
It is:
Am I paying more tax than necessary?
Am I rushing into this sale?
Could better timing improve the outcome?
Is tax driving the decision instead of strategy?
Capital gains tax should inform a decision, not dominate it.
Selling purely to avoid tax can create larger financial consequences.
A more useful question
Instead of asking only:
How do I reduce capital gains tax?
A more grounded question might be:
What is the net outcome after tax, and does selling now still make sense?
That shift moves the focus from tax minimisation to decision quality.
And decision quality usually produces better long-term outcomes.
Some of the most common practical questions people ask about reducing capital gains tax are below.
Can I avoid capital gains tax completely?
Not always. However, allowances, reliefs and timing strategies may reduce the taxable amount legally.
Is there a way to reduce capital gains tax on property?
Private Residence Relief may apply to your main home. Timing and joint ownership can also influence tax outcome.
Can I use my spouse’s allowance to reduce CGT?
Yes. Assets can often be transferred between spouses or civil partners without triggering capital gains tax, allowing both allowances to be used.
Does spreading a sale over two tax years reduce CGT?
In some cases, yes. Using two annual allowances across different tax years can reduce the total taxable gain.
A calm place to think first
If you are considering selling an asset and are concerned about capital gains tax, it is often worth pausing before acting.
Understanding:
The likely gain
Available allowances
How tax interacts with your income
Whether timing can improve the outcome
can prevent unnecessary regret.
Evoa exists to provide that quiet thinking space — before advice, before action.



Comments