Hi, I'm involved in the administration of a deceased estate. The deceased's main residence has a granny flat out the back occupied by her adult son rent-free. Water is shared supply, electricity and gas are metered separately. Purchased pre-1985, there is only one title. The local council started assessing the granny flat portion seperately for rates about 15 years ago for some reason.
Her son will keep the main house and granny flat. He's worried the granny flat portion somehow will not retain it's PPR exempt status through the inheritance and that there will be a CGT event for a portion of the property.
My view is that as the property is one one title, no income was ever generated by any portion, and the whole lot will be inherited by the adult son/beneficiary, then as far as the ATO is concerned it's one unit, and his mother's PPR exemption will transfer to him entirely, regardless of the seperate metering arrangements and council rate notices.
Thanks for your input!

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Most helpful replyATO Certified Response
Author: AriATO(Community Support)Community Support ATO Certified Response22 Jan 2024
Hi @Prenders71,
For income tax purposes the son is treated as having acquired the whole property for its market value at date of death of their mother.
When the son sells the property at some time in the future a CGT event occurs.
A main residence exemption can apply to reduce or exempt the capital gain on sale. See Your Main Residence.
However, a main residence exemption applies to a dwelling on land and if there if there are two buildings then it depends on how the property was used during the period of ownership as to whether a full ownership exemption applies.
In this situation a full main residence exemption from CGT can apply where the owner has used the whole property as their main residence.
Whether the property sale is fully exempt from CGT depends in part on how the property was used. If all of the property was used as one dwelling for the whole of the period of ownership then there is no reduction in main residence exemption on this basis. See TD 99/69