Inheritance Tax (IHT) is often called 'the most hated tax in Britain,' and rising property values combined with frozen thresholds mean it now catches far more families than intended. In 2024/25, HMRC collected a record £7.5 billion in IHT. The nil-rate band has been frozen at £325,000 since 2009 and won't increase until at least 2030. With the average UK house price above £290,000 and significantly higher in the South East, more estates are being pulled into the IHT net every year. Understanding the basics could save your family tens of thousands of pounds.
How Inheritance Tax Works
- •Nil-Rate Band: £325,000 per person
- •Residence Nil-Rate Band: additional £175,000 (if home passes to direct descendants)
- •Single person: up to £500,000 tax-free
- •Married couple: up to £1,000,000 tax-free
- •Rate: 40% on everything above the threshold
- •Transfers between spouses/civil partners are exempt from IHT
Do I need to worry about IHT if I'm not wealthy?+
Increasingly, yes. If you own a property, have pensions (which may now fall into IHT from April 2027), savings, and life insurance, your estate could easily exceed £325,000. A home worth £300,000 plus £100,000 in savings already breaches the nil-rate band for a single person.
Key Exemptions and Reliefs
- •Annual exemption: £3,000 per year (carry forward 1 year)
- •Small gifts: £250 per person, unlimited recipients
- •Wedding gifts: £5,000 (parent), £2,500 (grandparent), £1,000 (others)
- •Regular gifts from income: exempt if from surplus income
- •Charity gifts: fully exempt from IHT
- •10%+ to charity: reduces IHT rate from 40% to 36%
The Seven-Year Rule
- •Gifts survive 7 years: completely IHT-free
- •Taper relief: reduces IHT on gifts made 3–7 years before death
- •Must be a genuine gift — no benefit retained by the giver
- •Keep records of all gifts with dates and values
- •Gift with reservation rules catch sham gifts
- •Consider whole-of-life insurance to cover potential IHT on gifts
Simple Planning Steps
- •Estimate your total estate value
- •Use annual exemptions (£3,000/year) and give regularly
- •Write life insurance policies into trust
- •Make a will and review it every 5 years
- •Consider professional advice for estates above £500,000
- •Track net worth in SYM for ongoing awareness
Start Your Savings Journey Today
20+ savings challenges, daily tracking, and achievement badges -- all free.
Download on the App Store