Inheritance Tax (IHT) on adeceased’s estate and on gifts within 7 years of death is generally payable at the end of six months after the month of death, but tax on the estate must be paid before probate is granted, and this may necessitate earlier settlement. Tax on some property (e.g. real estate) can be paid by instalments. IHT on chargeable lifetime gifts (e.g. to most trusts) is payable on the later of six months after the month of transfer or 30 April in the next tax year.
The nil rate band for cumulative chargeable transfers in the last seven years is £325,000 (frozen until 6 April 2018). If one person in a married couple/civil partnership did not use their full nil rate band on death, the unused proportion increases the nil band of the survivor on their death.
Gifts above that are charged at the following rates:
Chargeable legacies on death – 40%
Gifts within 7 years of death – 40%, with reductions if made over 3 years before death
Lifetime chargeable gifts – 20% if the donee pays the tax, 25% if the donor pays.
Lifetime gifts between individuals are left out of account while the donor survives (‘potentially exempt transfers’). They are only charged to IHT if the donor dies within 7 years of the gift.
The following transfers are exempt from IHT:
Most business and agricultural property enjoys a 100% relief once it has been owned for two years. Some types of property are relieved only at 50%, and it is important to meet all the conditions.
Gifts or legacies to charity are not charged to IHT. If 10% of the relevant value of an individual’s estate on death is left to charity, IHT on the rest is charged at only 36%.
© 2024 Registered Office: 3 Lyttleton Court, Birmingham Street, Halesowen, West Midlands, B63 3HN
HTML Sitemap - XML Sitemap - Credits - Cookies Policy - Privacy Policy