One of the most effective ways in which you can reduce the amount of tax to be paid by your estate after you die is by giving away cash or assets during your own lifetime. The effect of such gifts can be to remove their value from your estate, thereby reducing the amount of inheritance tax due after death. Below we look at which lifetime gifts are automatically exempt from IHT and how potentially exempt transfers, or PETs, work under the 7 year rule.
What lifetime gifts are automatically exempt from IHT?
Gifts as between spouses or civil partners are usually made tax-free, regardless of the circumstances or timescales involved. There are also other lifetime gifts that will not count toward the value of your estate because they are automatically exempt. These include:
- The annual exemption: here you can gift up to £3,000 each tax year
- Small gift exemption: an unlimited number of small gifts can be made of up to £250 per person, provided no other gifts were made by you to these recipients
- Wedding or civil ceremony gifts: these gifts are subject to limits depending on the relationship between you and the recipient, and can range from £1,000 to £5,000
- Living costs: you can make payments from your surplus income to help with the living costs of a child aged under 18 or an elderly relative.
What are potentially exempt transfers and the 7 year rule?
A potentially exempt transfer (PET) is a gift that is not automatically exempt, but for which no inheritance tax will be payable if sufficient time has passed since the making of the gift and the date of death. A PET will only become chargeable to IHT where you fail to survive for 7 years from the making of the gift. Under the 7 year rule, if a gift is made more than 7 years prior to the date of death, regardless of the nature or size of the gift, no inheritance tax will be payable.
However, even for gifts that fall within 7 years of death, some tax relief may still be available in the form of taper relief if your estate is chargeable to inheritance tax. Taper relief applies if the total value of any gifts made within the 7-year period prior to death exceeds the inheritance tax-free threshold of £325,000 (2021-2022). It is the tax payable that tapers; not the value of the gift.
Under the taper relief rules, inheritance tax is payable on a sliding scale, from the full 40% IHT rate for gifts made less than 3 years ago, down to just 8% for gifts made within 6-7 years of death. As such, lifetime gifts, even in respect of those made within a few short years prior to the donor’s death, can have a significant impact on the amount of tax payable after you die.
To understand more about how lifetime gifts can be used to minimise the tax payable on your estate on death, together with other mechanisms that can be used to reduce any liability to IHT, professional advice should be sought from an Estate Planning and Wills expert.
Legal disclaimer
The matters contained herein are intended to be for general information purposes only. This blog does not constitute legal advice, nor is it a complete or authoritative statement of the law in England and Wales and should not be treated as such. Whilst every effort is made to ensure that the information is correct, no warranty, express or implied, is given as to its’ accuracy, and no liability is accepted for any error or omission. Before acting on any of the information contained herein, expert legal advice should always be sought.