Business Newsletters - Winter 2007
Do you have double the nil-rate band?
Inheritance tax (IHT) worries a lot of people because the IHT threshold, known as the nil-rate band, has not been increased in line with house prices over recent years. On death, all your wealth, including the value of your house, is taxed at 40% on all amounts above the nil-rate band, which is currently £300,000.
If your house is jointly owned the actual wealth in your name may be
less than the £300,000 threshold. When the first spouse or civil
partner dies and leaves everything to the surviving spouse or civil partner
there is no IHT to pay, as the bequest is exempt from IHT for transfers
between spouses and civil partners. However, when the surviving spouse
or civil partner dies there may be a large IHT bill as all the wealth
previously owned by the couple is now in the hands of one person, with
only one nil-rate band to use.
The Chancellor has tried to solve this problem by allowing any
unused nil-rate band on the death of the first spouse or civil partner
to be transferred to the surviving partner who dies on or after 9 October
2007. That may give a total IHT exemption for a surviving spouse or civil
partner of £600,000 (for 2007/08) rising to £700,000 for
the tax year 2010/11.
Say Fred, a widower, died on 1 October 2007 with an estate worth £500,000.
His executors will be required to pay IHT at 40% on £200,000 (£500,000 – £300,000)
amounting to £80,000. If Fred dies on 1 November 2007, and his wife
did not use her nil-rate band when she died, his estate has the benefit
of two nil-rate bands totalling £600,000. Now Fred’s executors
will pay no IHT at all on his estate of £500,000.
The effect of transferring the nil-rate band could be achieved
before this IHT change with the use of a discretionary Will trust. If
your Will contains such a trust the Will does not necessarily have to
be rewritten. If the only reason for the trust was to use each spouse’s
or civil partner's nil-rate band there may be little point in creating
such a trust. However, there can still be advantages in creating a trust:
- a person may want to direct who the ultimate beneficiaries of the assets will be rather than leaving that decision to the surviving spouse or civil partner
- assets put into the trust on the first death may grow at a faster rate than the increase in the nil-rate band. That growth is not included in the surviving spouse’s or civil partner's estate.
The inheritance tax change does not help couples who are not married
or not in a registered civil partnership.
Please contact us if you would like more advice specific to your
circumstances.