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Home > Finance > Taxes > Inheritance Tax, A Concis...
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Inheritance Tax, A Concise Guide
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With ever-increasing property prices, more and more people’s assets are
now worth more than the inheritance tax threshold of £285,000, which
has never been increased in proportion to the recent property boom.
With a rate of 40% inheritance tax on any assets above the £285,000
threshold in the estate, this can really put a dent in what your heirs
receive from your estate.
Inheritance tax is levied upon a person’s death. Once all of their
assets have been totalled up, anything over the threshold will have to
be paid by the executors of their will.
It’s becoming increasingly difficult to avoid inheritance tax, but
there are some strategies that you can put in place to help minimise
its impact. Inheritance tax is an extremely complicated subject,
though, so you should never attempt to make any plans yourself without
good professional advice, otherwise you may end up making your tax
situation worse.
Make a will
First, make a will. This in itself won’t help you to avoid inheritance
tax, but it will make your intentions clear so that any inheritance tax
planning you have put in place will come into effect.
Transfers between spouses
If you’re married or in a civil partnership, both of you should attempt to use your full threshold separately.
Husbands and wives or civil partners can transfer assets (such as
property) to each other without incurring inheritance tax. However,
this will increase the value of the surviving partner’s estate, which
will be subject to tax when they die. If this brings it above the
threshold, inheritance tax will then be due. Another possibility is to
bequeath your estate to someone other than your spouse, for example
your children. However, this has its own complications and is not
always appropriate.
Gifts
If you want to give something away during your lifetime but still keep
using it, the Inland Revenue may still consider it part of your estate
for tax purposes when you die. Such gifts are regulated under the
‘inheritance gift with reservation’ rules. For example, if you sold
your house to your children you may have to pay full market rent. Also,
they could be liable to pay capital gains tax on it if it is a second
property for them.
However, within certain guidelines you can give away some assets and
gifts to friends and relatives, known as ‘potentially exempt
transfers’. These will not be subject to inheritance tax as long as
they are given at least seven years before you die. If you die within
seven years of giving a gift, tax will have to be paid on a sliding
scale.
Some gifts are completely exempt from the inheritance tax rules. You
can gift up to £3,000 in any tax year, plus up to £3,000 in unused
allowance from the previous year. Unused allowance can only be carried
forward from one previous year. There’s also an allowance for wedding
gifts to children (up to £5,000 for each child) and grandchildren (up
to £2,500 per grandchild) and other friends and relatives (up to
£1,000). A small gift allowance of £250 per recipient per year is also
permitted.
Some gifts, however, may be subject to capital gains tax if any income
is made from them, e.g. if they are invested in stocks and shares.
Gifts to charities
Gifts to registered charities and political parties are always exempt from inheritance tax.
Trust funds
In some circumstances, it’s possible to set up a trust fund. However,
the rules regarding trust funds were changed in the 2006 budget to
restrict inheritance tax avoidance in this way so it’s not always a
feasible option. Most money held in trust for children will be subject
to inheritance tax after they reach 18 unless they are disabled.
Life policies
Certain types of life policy are exempt from your estate under
inheritance tax rules. So, it may be possible to pay regular sums into
such a policy, either towards a trust or towards your children, in the
hope that it will make enough money to pay some or all of the
inheritance tax bill at the same time as reducing the size of your
taxable estate.
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