The Scotsman

Home in on the facts when it comes to dealing with rules of inheritanc­e tax

Ensure peace of mind for everyone in your family by protecting your assets before it’s too late

- Gareth Shaw is Head of Money at which.co.uk

QI am sitting down with my elderly parents to have a conversati­on about inheritanc­e. I’m not looking forward to it. My father has a great civil service pension, but not much in savings. The main asset is their home, which is worth just under £1 million. Am I right in thinking that that this can be inherited without inheritanc­e tax being payable? I’m trying to convince my father to avoid putting the property in complex trusts he really doesn’t understand.

AIt’s always tough to have matter-offact conversati­ons about death and the administra­tion that comes with it. But it is sensible for you to do it now, while your parents have the mental capacity and time to make decisions about the future and, critically, understand how the law, taxes and the processes in dealing with someone’s estate work. Let’s start off with the fundamenta­ls. Inheritanc­e tax is charged at 40 per cent on what you inherit. But each individual has an inheritanc­e tax-free allowance – technicall­y called their “nil-rate band”, that allows them to pass on assets tax free. This is currently £325,000 per person. Assets can be inherited by married couples and civil partners tax free – so if your father dies first, for example, your mother can inherit his assets and won’t have to worry about a tax bill. But she will also inherit his nil-rate band, which can be added to her own £325,000 tax-free allowance, meaning that your parents can actually pass on £650,000 free of inheritanc­e tax. You would then pay 40 per cent on anything over this amount.

There is an additional benefit, however, when an estate includes a property. Since 2017, homeowners had had an additional tax-free allowance, called the “residence nil-rate band”. In the current tax year, this is £175,000 per person. Much like the standard tax-free allowance, this can be inherited by spouses and civil partners and means that with all tax-free allowances combined, your parents could give away £1m taxfree, provided their property is included in the estate.

There is a condition attached – beneficiar­ies must be “direct descendant­s” of the people who have died. The government describes this group as: Children and their spouses or civil partners; grandchild­ren and their spouses or civil partners; great-grandchild­ren and their spouses or civil partners; stepchildr­en; adopted children; foster children and children who were under the guardiansh­ip of the people passing on their estate.

The home must be included as part of the estate, which means it is counted in the assets directly owned by your parents. If your father were to put the property in a trust, this may mean that he cannot claim the additional property allowance.

It sounds like your parents own a substantia­l property.

If they decided to downsize, they can still claim the property allowance. The executors of your estate will need to work out what's technicall­y known as your “downsizing addition”. This is the amount of the main residence nil-rate band that you would have “lost” by moving to a cheaper home.

 ??  ?? 0 If you want to pass your home on to your children, get to know what the government can claim from your estate
0 If you want to pass your home on to your children, get to know what the government can claim from your estate
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