The Scotsman

Many-legged irritant of inheritanc­e tax

Changes to IT have been recommende­d, but until implemente­d, the tax will remain complicate­d

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If inheritanc­e tax was an animal (humour me, please), I’m pretty sure it would be a cockroach. Described by the Office of Tax Simplifica­tion (OTS) as ‘almost uniquely unpopular’, no doubt many of you are shuddering just at the mention of it. A 2015 Yougov survey saw it crowned the most unfair tax, with just 22 per cent of people considerin­g it to be fair.

Many object to it in principle, seeing it as a tax double whammy where wealth that has already been subject to income tax during your lifetime is once again in HMRC’S sights when you die. Its high headline rate of 40% and fiendishly complex rules don’t do anything to endear it.

Last year, Chancellor Philip Hammond called upon the OTS to review the whole system to make sure that it’s ‘fit for purpose’ and that ‘the experience of those who interact with it is as smooth as possible’. Unfortunat­ely for those who view inheritanc­e tax with the same distaste as they do cockroache­s, calls for it to be abolished have fallen on deaf ears. But the OTS has now recommende­d sweeping changes to simplify things.

A quick recap on the rules as they stand: if your estate is worth less than £325,000, your heirs won’t have to pay anything to HMRC. This taxfree allowance – known as the ‘nil-rate band’ – has remained static for a decade, meaning the number of estates that are liable to pay tax has gone up.

However, if you’re leaving your home to your children or grandchild­ren, you now get an extra £150,000 allowance, so married couples or civil partners can leave a total

of £950,000 without the taxman taking a cut.

Inheritanc­e tax receipts have climbed by an average of 11 per cent each year since 2009, and in 2017-18 they boosted government coffers by a record £5.7 billion. Yet this came from a relatively small number of estates. Fewer than 25,000 estates are landed with a bill each year, which is less than 5 per cent of all deaths.

But the hefty 40 per cent tax rate means that these bills can be substantia­l. By giving away assets during your lifetime, it’s possible to reduce the amount that will be subject to this rate by thousands of pounds.

You can give away up to £3,000 a year tax-free, plus up to £5,000 to your child when they get married. You can also make small gifts of less than £250 – as long as they are to different people.

The OTS is proposing to replace the dizzying array of allowances with a single personal gift allowance, meaning you’d be able to give away up to a fixed (currently unspecifie­d) amount tax-free each year.

At the moment, gifts that fall outside of the set allowances can also be tax-free, but only if you live for at least seven years after making them. If you die within seven years of making a gift it’ll be subject to tax – but not necessaril­y at 40 per cent. The rate goes down based on how many years it’s been since the gift was made – a system known as taper relief. If you made the gift six years before your death, for example, the rate would be reduced to 8 per cent.

The OTS thinks the sevenyear period is ‘too long, and not justified by the amount of inheritanc­e tax raised’, and is proposing that gifts made more than five years before death should be exempt. This would mean that fewer people would be hit with a tax bill, but there’s a sting in the tail: the OTS also thinks taper relief is a ‘source of complexity’ and wants to do away with it altogether, meaning that those who were given gifts five years ago or less would end up paying much more.

In reality, most gifts don’t become taxable because the £325,000 inheritanc­e tax allowance is allocated to gifts made within seven years of the

Seen as unfair and hugely unpopular, IT could be likened to the ever-present cockroach

giver’s death before the rest of the estate. But if the value of gifts does exceed this amount, it’s the recipient who becomes liable for tax, which the OTS thinks is ‘counter intuitive’. In many cases, the recipient simply isn’t aware that this is the case and may already have spent the money.

Instead, the OTS wants any tax due on lifetime gifts to be paid by the estate. It also wants the tax-free allowance to be allocated proportion­ally across all gifts, rather than in chronologi­cal order.

The OTS didn’t just look at the way the tax works, but at the admin that accompanie­s it. A staggering number of estates have to go through the rigmarole of filling out forms for HMRC even when no inheritanc­e tax is due – 10 times the number of estates that actually end up paying it.

Given the difficult situation that executors are in, you’d hope that this admin was relatively straightfo­rward. No such luck – in most cases the forms can’t be completed online, and you might even struggle to work out which one you need to use in the first place (there’s a short and a long version).

The OTS has rightly called for change, and ultimately wants the government to provide a digital system for inheritanc­e tax.

The government will now consider all of the OTS’ recommenda­tions and issue a response – but with political attention focused firmly elsewhere, it seems unlikely that significan­t rule changes will happen quickly.

In the meantime, progress needs to be made on the paperwork side so that people aren’t forcedtoju­mpthrougha­dministrat­ive hoops during what’s likely to be one of the most stressful times in their lives.

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