Inheritance Tax Notes
Inheritance Tax Notes
Inheritance tax is governed principally by the Inheritance Tax Act 1984 (IHTA 1984).
Tax applies to death estates and can also catch transfers made during life.
There are three main occasions when IHT may be charged:
on death
on lifetime gifts made to individuals within 7 years prior to death
on lifetime gifts to a company or into a trust
The death of a transferor may result in an additional charge to IHT on any transfers of value which
he has made in the seven years immediately preceding his death
The IHT liability on LCTs made in that period is recalculated and the trustees will be liable for
any extra tax payable.
The cumulative total relevant to the LCT will determine how much (if
any) of the nil rate band is available.
The cumulative total is made up of:
o any other LCTs made in the 7 years before the LCT being
assessed (even if such earlier LCTs were made more than 7
years before the transferor’s death); and
o any PETs made during the 7 years before the LCT being
assessed which have become chargeable as a result of the
transferor’s death.
Who will pay? Deceased executors (are they named?) or PRs will usually be liable to pay
the IHT on the estate generally
PET – the transferee is usually liable for any IHT
LCT – the transferor is primarily liable for any IHT, but in practice HMRC
can claim from trustees and they usually pay it
On recalculation, if extra IHT owed, the transferee is primarily liable.
When? Basic rule: 6 months after death
Instalment option: IHTA 1984, s227 and s228.
Instalment option
Provided requirements are met, payment of IHT can be made in 10
instalments, the first being due when the tax would have been due.
Qualifying assets:
Land
Business/interest in business
Shares (unquoted or quoted) which immediately before death gave
control of the company to the deceased; and
Unquoted shares which do not give control if either…
o A holding of at least 10% of the nominal value of the
company’s shares and worth more than £20,000, or
o HMRC is satisfied that the tax cannot be paid in one sum
without undue hardship, or
o The IHT attributable to the shares and any other instalment
option property in the estate amounts to at least 20% of the
IHT payable on the estate