• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Cheyney Goulding

Cheyney Goulding Solicitors

t: 01483 56 76 76   e: legal@cheyneygoulding.co.uk

alt-text

  • Home
  • About
  • Business Services
  • Wealth Management
  • Team
  • Contact
  • Insights

Service feature

Neighbour Disputes

21/05/2025 by Graham Young

Neighbour disputes can take a variety of forms for example :

Noise

Disputes over a boundary or fence

Parking

Trees right to light issues

Breach of Planning regulations

Any of these issues can cause stress and tension which can lead to  unpleasant incidents between neighbours which might involve the police getting involved.

It is important to keep a diary of events that might be helpful in the future if it is necessary to take matters further. It is important to take advice at an early stage before matters escalate out of control . It might be necessary to instruct a solicitor or boundary surveyor to clarify the issues and to try to resolve matters amicably .

Litigation might be necessary although it can be an expensive and stressful process .  A  decision to issue Court proceedings should not be taken lightly. Litigation is easy to get into and expensive to get out of. However, mediation is also an option that is worth considering . It is quicker and cheaper than lengthy Court proceedings and reaching a practical settlement might be a sensible solution .

It is also important to remember that when your  property is being sold in the future it will be necessary to disclose any dispute with neighbours on the Property Information Questionnaire . A dispute could therefore hinder a future sale or lead to a reduction of price .

It is also possible that you might have purchased a property in good faith and a neighbour dispute was not disclosed by the seller . You might have a cause of action against the seller for failure to disclose the dispute .

If you would like any further information please contact Graham Young on 01483 796002 or by email on gyoung@cheyneygoulding.co.uk

Filed Under: Business, Service feature

Inheritance tax planning

10/01/2023 by

Filed Under: Wealth Management, Service feature

Commercial Agreements

10/01/2023 by

Filed Under: Business, Service feature

Inheritance Tax Planning

16/12/2022 by

It is vitally important to use all ways possible to save the payment of inheritance tax when you die. Although you will not have to pay the tax yourself, your beneficiaries will and it will make the administration of your estate more complicated for everyone involved.

There are still plenty of circumstances where Trust Wills can be used effectively for Tax savings and other important reasons.

The introduction of the ‘Residence Nil Rate Band’, from April 2017, gives further scope for tax planning through wills.

At Cheyney Goulding, we know that every individual’s circumstances are different and that is why we take care to listen carefully to what you want to achieve and advise you fully on all the options available to you.

When is IHT charged?
IHT is primarily a charge on your assets on death, including your share of assets jointly held with another person. Lifetime gifts made within seven years prior to your death can also impact the tax payable.

IHT is also charged where an asset appears to have been given away, but where you in fact retain the use of (or a significant benefit in) the asset given. For example, gifting your house but still living in it.

It is also charged on lifetime gifts to companies and to certain types of trust and these trusts also suffer periodic IHT charges.

Who is liable to IHT?
If you have lived in the UK all your life, IHT applies to your worldwide assets.
What is the rate of tax?

The nil rate band (see below) is charged at 0%.

The balance is charged at:
20% for lifetime gifts to companies or to relevant property trusts (with further tax due if the donor dies within seven years).
40% on estates on death.

The rate of IHT on death can be reduced for individuals who leave 10% or more of their net estate to charity.

Nil rate band and residence nil rate band
The nil rate band and residence nil rate band are amounts which are chargeable to IHT at 0%. The basic nil rate band is currently £325,000. There is also an extra nil rate band (called the residence nil rate band) of between £100,000 and £175,000 (depending on the year of death) if the family home is inherited by children or grandchildren.

If you are married, your surviving spouse, or civil partner can “inherit” the unused portion of your nil rate band or residence nil rate band.

Exemptions available for lifetime gifts and on death
Certain gifts are exempt from IHT and do not use up your nil rate band. Briefly, the main exemptions are as follows:
Gifts to your spouse, same sex spouse or civil partner, opposite sex civil partner.
Gifts to charities established in the UK, any other EU country, Norway or Iceland.

Exemptions available for lifetime gifts only
Additional exemptions are also sometimes available for lifetime gifts.

Reliefs available for lifetime gifts and on death

If the gift is of a special type of asset and the necessary conditions are met, relief may apply to reduce the amount of IHT payable, sometimes to nil. The main reliefs are:
Agricultural property relief and Business property relief

Domicile
IHT is chargeable on individuals who are domiciled in the UK, or those who have UK assets.

Individuals who are domiciled in the UK are subject to IHT on their worldwide assets. From 6 April 2017, individuals who have been UK resident for more than 15 out of the last 20 tax years will be deemed to be UK domiciled for all tax purposes.

Individuals who are not domiciled in the UK are subject to IHT on their UK assets only.

Can I use a Will to save tax?
As has been seen above, any gifts to charity or to surviving spouses or civil partners are free of tax. Also, every individual has their own nil rate band threshold. In addition, certain assets (business and farming assets for example) attract reliefs from tax.

It does not make sense for assets or amounts that would not produce a tax bill to be given to beneficiaries who are tax-exempt beneficiaries. For example, if business assets are given to a surviving spouse, two tax reliefs apply and so one is wasted.

It would be better for assets that attract tax relief to be given to beneficiaries who do not. The correct wording in a Will can arrange this. However, you may want your spouse to inherit your business for example and so advice needs to be taken as to how you can arrange this whilst still making best use of all the tax reliefs available.

Can I use Trust and Lifetime planning to save tax?
Yes, we can show you various ways to reduce IHT for your family, including Lifetime Trust planning.

Filed Under: Service feature

Commercial Agreements

16/12/2022 by

Helping you maintain strong business relationships.
Providing a strong legal framework to support the relationship businesses have with their customers and suppliers. It is important that agreements comply with ever changing regulation and robustly protect your business interests. Cheyney Goulding helps ensure you have the right contractual terms in place to reflect the arrangement you have with suppliers and customers whilst providing protection from liability. We can help meet your contractual requirements.

  • Our team of lawyers advise on a broad range of commercial legal matters including:
  • Agency and distribution agreements
  • Terms and conditions for the supply of goods and/or services
  • Tenders
  • Software and development agreements
  • E-commerce, online trading and distance selling

Filed Under: Service feature

Later life planning & care home fees

10/01/2023 by

Filed Under: Wealth Management, Service feature

Commercial property

10/01/2023 by

Filed Under: Business, Service feature

Later Life Planning & Care Home Fees

16/12/2022 by

We offer a comprehensive later life planning appointment where we can discuss all options available to our clients from preparing Wills which include trusts to protect their assets for future generations to ways of reducing inheritance tax liability on death and how best to deal with the possibility of having to fund care home fees.

Filed Under: Service feature

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 5
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer Widget Header

 

Footer

Site map

  • Home
  • About
  • Team
  • Insights
  • Careers

© 2025 Cheyney Goulding LLP

Business Services

Business services

  • Commercial Agreements
  • Commercial Property
  • Corporate & M&A
  • Data Protection & Privacy
  • Dispute Resolution & Litigation
  • Employment
  • Finance, Lending & Security
  • Information Technology
  • Intellectual Property

Wealth Management Services

Wealth management

  • Inheritance Tax Planning
  • Later Life Planning & Care Home Fees
  • Powers of Attorney
  • Probate & Estate Administration
  • Trusts
  • Wills
  • Residential Property
  • Contentious Probate & Will/Inheritance Disputes
  • Court of Protection Advice & Applications

Contact

Phone Number:   01483 56 76 76

Fax Number:   +44(0)1483 30 05 38

Email:   legal@cheyneygoulding.co.uk

More

More

  • Complaints handling policy
  • Prices & services information
  • Privacy policy
  • Privacy notice
  • Cookie policy

Cheyney Goulding LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with registered number OC329864 and VAT number 641411771. The registered office and principal place of business is at Ward House, 6 Ward Street, Guildford, GU1  4LH. The members are G.R. Young and T.M. Marshall.

Cheyney Goulding LLP is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority and our professional code of conduct can be accessed here.

Brand and Website by Supafrank. Photography by Matt Wreford