- Original Poster
- #1
Hi All, I've searched through this site and found many helpful threads but am hoping for some (accounting) advice regarding taking over a shop I've had my offer accepted on.
Background: Shop is a small local grocery shop, 7 year leasehold with 3 years remaining, shop owner is a sole trader and someone we've known for a long time. I have been running a floral store at home (sole trader) and am making enough to expand into this local shop space. We've agreed on a price of about £20k for giving away the shop. Property freeholder currently giving me the lease (7 year, renews at the end, solicitors have begun proceedings). We are all neighbours in the area and the deal is friendly.
Grocery shop owner doesn't want to use a solicitor though as it is a small sale and we all trust each other which is fine with me. There are very minimal equipment, fixtures, fittings, stock (<£1000) that I'm taking on. Hence, most of the sale price will go down for "business goodwill" if I'm not mistaken? Shop owner doesn't have great english skills and is scared that he may still be liable for things if the business is sold to me and I get his business in trouble (which I've told him is nonsensical as I have a completely different business and it will have no association with him at all). Nevertheless he wants the £20k sale to be for the "transfer of the lease" which I've told him isn't how it's done. I don't mind how the sale happens, I just want to get my shop running but you can't buy a lease off of a leaseholder like the way he's wanting to do it right? Is there a way to do it in the direction that he wants? What are the options here if he's scared to sell it as a business sale? I will talk to him but just wanted some advice on the options to buy a (small) shop. I have residential property experience but not commercial spaces experience.
Side question - how do (big retail) companies buy shop spaces from each other? How does it get logged in the accounts and what is the name of the contract between them? E.g. If Asda wants to buy the shop space of a Hollister (assuming minimal stock, equipment, fitting exchange similarly to my situation). Or do they just let the lease finish?
Edit: I'm aware that if the purchase goes down as a business sale, it helps me if I eventually sell the business in terms of CGT.
Thank you very much for your help.
Background: Shop is a small local grocery shop, 7 year leasehold with 3 years remaining, shop owner is a sole trader and someone we've known for a long time. I have been running a floral store at home (sole trader) and am making enough to expand into this local shop space. We've agreed on a price of about £20k for giving away the shop. Property freeholder currently giving me the lease (7 year, renews at the end, solicitors have begun proceedings). We are all neighbours in the area and the deal is friendly.
Grocery shop owner doesn't want to use a solicitor though as it is a small sale and we all trust each other which is fine with me. There are very minimal equipment, fixtures, fittings, stock (<£1000) that I'm taking on. Hence, most of the sale price will go down for "business goodwill" if I'm not mistaken? Shop owner doesn't have great english skills and is scared that he may still be liable for things if the business is sold to me and I get his business in trouble (which I've told him is nonsensical as I have a completely different business and it will have no association with him at all). Nevertheless he wants the £20k sale to be for the "transfer of the lease" which I've told him isn't how it's done. I don't mind how the sale happens, I just want to get my shop running but you can't buy a lease off of a leaseholder like the way he's wanting to do it right? Is there a way to do it in the direction that he wants? What are the options here if he's scared to sell it as a business sale? I will talk to him but just wanted some advice on the options to buy a (small) shop. I have residential property experience but not commercial spaces experience.
Side question - how do (big retail) companies buy shop spaces from each other? How does it get logged in the accounts and what is the name of the contract between them? E.g. If Asda wants to buy the shop space of a Hollister (assuming minimal stock, equipment, fitting exchange similarly to my situation). Or do they just let the lease finish?
Edit: I'm aware that if the purchase goes down as a business sale, it helps me if I eventually sell the business in terms of CGT.
Thank you very much for your help.
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