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Market View: The benefit of net asset value when selling your nursery

Leah Turner, co-founder of Owen Froebel, which offers day nursery brokerage, valuations and sales, on understanding and benefiting from net asset value (NAV) when selling up.

The benefits of incorporation are well known, and many day nurseries now trade as limited companies as opposed to sole traders or partnerships. There are pros and cons to each trading structure both during your tenure and for when you come to sell, and this debate is best had with your accountant as to which is right for you.

However, when you come to sell your nursery, if you trade as a limited company, you should give some thought to understanding (or at least ensuring your accountant and solicitor do) the term net asset value (NAV). NAV is the concept that when you sell your limited company, there is no starting and stopping, so it is not as simple as when you have a sole trader where selected assets are transferred but not ongoing liabilities. When a limited company is bought, all of the assets and liabilities transfer. This means that although you may agree a sale of say, £500,000, this is just the indicative price. The actual offer is £500,000 plus or minus your NAV figure. This means if the business is in debt because it has no cash but owes taxes/employees, etc, you might end up with a lot less than £500,000.

More interestingly, though, when you sell with a positive NAV, you should be paid for that cash (less any other liabilities). The even better bit is that when you get that cash, your tax liability could be as low as 10 per cent on the same (if using BAD relief against your capital gains tax). This is much better than the higher and additional rate dividend tax rates of 33.75 per cent and 39.35 per cent respectively, so if you are planning to sell, you may want to put a halt on the dividends for a while and build up your NAV. It could save you a lot of tax!

Any deposits held on account for parents would be considered a debt as part of the NAV adjustment, so, if you have £40,000 in parental deposits, you would be expected to hand this over to the purchasers on completion and it wouldn’t be considered as cash in the bank.