Inheritance Tax Is a Nice Earner For HM Govt

The latest update from Wealth Club. Pay tax all your life, pay tax when you buy stuff, pay tax when you insure assets. Then your relatives pay tax when you pass away. What a racket. Here’s the word from Wealth Club and ;

Figures published by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) this morning, show inheritance tax receipts hit £5 billion in the 7 months from April to October 2024.

This is £0.5 billion higher than the same period in the previous tax year and continues the upward trajectory over the last two decades. Last full tax year inheritance tax raised £7.499 billion and currently just one in 20 estates is liable.

However, in the Autumn Budget the Chancellor announced:

  1. An extension to the freeze on IHT thresholds, which have been frozen for a further two years (until 2030).
  2. Agricultural Relief and Business Property Relief have been reformed, meaning that from April 2026, the first £1m of qualifying combined assets will have no inheritance tax at all, but for assets overt £1m a 50% relief will apply, at an effective rate of 20%.
  3. Qualifying AIM shares will no longer have full exemption from IHT, instead from 2026 they will have an inheritance tax rate of 20% if they are held for two years.
  4. From 6th April 2027, inherited pensions could be subject to inheritance tax in addition to income tax levied on the recipient meaning passed down pensions could be taxed at an effective rate of up to 67% – subject to consultation.

Alex Davies, CEO and Founder of Wealth Club said:

“Inheritance tax was already an absolute cash cow for the government. The extreme changes announced in last month’s Budget which badly affect farmers, business owners, pension policyholders and investors, mean these figures are only going to increase over the coming years.

We believe all the changes to inheritance tax made in the Budget are extremely short sighted. Firstly, the tax burden is already at its highest in 70 years and growth is very low. More tax is likely to stifle growth further. Secondly these changes have given those affected no time to plan. It’s very much a case of “one day, that’s your money, the next day, it’s not”; a sentiment which is hardly going to encourage people to invest for the future whether that’s in their own business or in a savings vehicle such as a pension.

That said you can only base your decisions on the facts as they are now and seemingly there are still ways available to reduce the inheritance tax paid by your estate, although many of them do require time and more risk:

Those concerned about inheritance tax should consider:

  • Giving money away early. Gifts taken out of regular income, which are not deemed to affect the giver’s standard of living, are inheritance tax free on day one – as are certain smaller gifts. Timing is key as you can give unlimited amounts away but typically these take seven years to be completely inheritance tax free. Of course, once you give away the money you’ve lost control. If you need it back for an emergency, that’s not an option.
  • Investing in unlisted companies that qualify for Business Property Relief. These are typically inheritance tax free after two years. Investing in unquoted businesses can be risky, however, unlike giving the money away, you retain control. From 2026 you will have an overall £1 million Business Relief Allowance. Anything in addition will be taxed at 20%.
  • Investing in an AIM ISA. ISAs are not inheritance tax free. When you pass away, your loved ones could miss out on 40% of your hard-earned cash.  AIM ISAs are a popular, although much riskier way, to reduce this. Currently after two years they could be IHT free. From 2026 the IHT will be halved toa rate of 20%.”

 

ANOTHER NICE EARNER:

BROADSTONE COMMENT ON IPT

Cara Spinks, Head of Life & Health at leading financial services consultancy Broadstone, commented: “Insurance premium tax was not on the cards in October’s Autumn Budget, despite many hoping for the Chancellor to announce some measures to relieve the rising costs on many important insurance products.

“Health insurance products, such as health cash plans and private medical insurance, have seen increased pressure on premiums at a time when NHS challenges are driving employers to expand coverage of these healthcare benefits to support their employees’ health, and individuals look to the more efficient private healthcare market.

“IPT is an increasingly lucrative source of income for the Treasury, but with rising costs pushing up premiums, the affordability of the private sector is narrowing for businesses and individuals alike, risking the many preventative health benefits that can be gained from wider access to the UK’s private healthcare market.

“With the increase in employers’ national insurance adding to cost pressures for businesses, and the NHS still struggling with a 7.57 million long waiting list, we encourage the government to consider reducing IPT on health insurance products to promote the preventative benefits these products can bring and support the health and wellbeing of the UK workforce along with long-term economic growth.”

HMRC tax receipts and National Insurance contributions for the UK – GOV.UK

About alastair walker 19522 Articles
20 years experience as a journalist and magazine editor. I'm your contact for press releases, events, news and commercial opportunities at Insurance-Edge.Net

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