A Family Card on your account is fine for living expenses.Wales4rugbyWC19 wrote: ↑Wed May 11, 2022 1:03 pm Can anybody give a justification for gift taxes between spouses in Japan??? whilst I understand gift taxes about inheritance to children and grandchildren, we do have these in the UK. I think it is ridiculous that in the 21st century spouses in Japan cannot have a joint bank account because of gift taxes. Both my wife and I have a joint bank account in the UK and it is a far better and more honest way to run your family finances.
Japan does not have the concept of communal property between spouses.
However, there are a set of Exempt Gifts, including: (Inheritance Tax Law, Article 21 Paragraph 3)
2. Gifts between persons who have a legal responsibility to support each other, unless the gift is made for a purpose other than support or livelihood.
Transfer of money between spouses to pay living expenses would be covered under this exemption.
Transfer of Residential Property would not.
Support for dependents (living expenses, education expenses, etc.) is not considered to be a gift, but anything not directly considered to be direct living expense support to dependents would be considered a gift.
Anything that would be categorized as a Gift is subject to Gift Tax on the value of the gift, on the value of all gifts received in the year over the Gift Tax Allowance of Y1.1M. If gifted within 3 years before the death of the donor, it would be reassessed as Inheritance, and may be subject to additional tax under the Inheritance Tax.
There are some rules regarding valuation of certain types of gifts.
Gift Tax is levied on the Recipient, not the Donor, and gifts received in excess of Y1,100,000 Gift Allowance in any Tax Year are subject to Gift Tax, with some exceptions or additional allowances for certain types of gifts.
Any gift received within 3 years before the Donor's death, would be reassessed as part of the Donor's Estate and adjusted for Inheritance Taxes.
There is a way to defer tax on certain gifts to the death of the Donor, when the gift would be assessed for Inheritance Tax on the amount of the Gift at the time of the Gift.
There is a Special Once-In-A-Lifetime Per Spouse Allowance for a Receipt of a Gift of a Primary Residence or funds to purchase a Primary Residence received from a Spouse of more than 20 years. (A Donor can make multiple gifts to multiple spouses of more than 20 years each.)
There is a huge Spouse Allowance against Inheritance Tax which means that many spouses would not be subject to Inheritance Tax.