Calls to scrap 'political' inheritance tax rule and hike payments by as much as £140k

The Government has been urged to bin a key inheritance tax (IHT) rule that might imply Britons would pay as much as £140,000 extra when inheriting a house.

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Fiona Dodd, non-public shopper accomplice at Mayo Wynne Baxter, instructed Express.co.uk the Government ought to “remove” the residence nil price band (RNRB) coverage.

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She stated: “This is simply a political sop to conservative voters who love a 'hard-working family' and plays into the 'Englishman’s home is his castle' cliché.”

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The band applies when a direct descendant inherits a property that was the principle residence of the deceased.

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It gives an additional allowance of as much as £175,000 earlier than an individual pays IHT when inheriting from a person, or as much as £350,000 when inheriting from a pair.

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The successor pays a typical 40 p.c IHT price on any complete inherited belongings above these allowances.

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So if the RNRB was scrapped, an heir would pay as much as £70,000 extra when inheriting belongings from a single individual or as much as £140,000 extra if inheriting from a pair.

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Other analysts assume the RNRB coverage is proportionate. Helen Morrissey, head of retirement evaluation at Hargreaves Lansdown, stated the RNRB has been vital in defending households from being hit by IHT bills.

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She commented: “We’ve seen enormous house price inflation in recent years which means many people may be accruing a liability without even realising it which can leave their families with a big bill that they haven’t prepared for.

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“Removing the residential nil rate band would only mean more people get hit. We need to see thresholds that have been frozen for years starting to rise to stop people unwittingly being drawn into paying IHT.”

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Ms Dodd agreed that some bands ought to be elevated to make the system fairer, taking into consideration that the coverage is linked to look after the aged.

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She defined: “People see care costs as a higher tax on their assets, particularly at the lower end, so allowing them to keep more of their assets before paying for care and transforming inheritance tax into a tiered system would be much fairer.

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“For example, the Government could consider having decent nil rate bands and separate tiers of inheritance tax rates for the next bands of wealth and start with a lower rate.

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“The nil rate bands need to be adequately high in order to avoid catching the ‘middle’ and only target the truly wealthy.”

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She additionally stated ministers ought to ditch the tax reduction for when an individual makes a donation to charity, arguing this in reality means individuals depart much less to good causes of their will.

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If an individual leaves 10 p.c or extra of their property to a number of charities, the IHT price for the remainder of the property - after the charitable reward has been deducted - is lowered from 40 p.c to 36 p.c.

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Ms Dodd stated: “This creates an artificial incentive to leave “only” 10 p.c to charity and may end up in lowered presents to charities.

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‌“The Government should also consider amending the lifetime giving rules to allow an increased annual allowance, which hasn’t risen from £3,000, for many years.

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“Finally, stop thinking trusts are all about tax avoidance and have a proper reform of tax for gifting into trusts to make it the same as gifting to a person and reform the inheritance tax 10-yearly charge, which is expensive to calculate and brings in a minuscule amount of money.”

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Elisabeth Squires, wills and probate solicitor at Britton & Time, stated the IHT system might be made fairer by calculating the tax based mostly on an individual’s earnings once they die.

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She stated: “If someone who earned a lower annual salary was granted a lower inheritance tax bracket or rate compared to someone who earned a higher annual salary, this would likely disperse some of the tension between both the higher and lower classes and promote a more socially equal society.”

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