Millennials are likely to enjoy the biggest "inheritance boom"

Just seems weird to be so against inheritance - to the extent you’d take it 75% for anything over £10k... yet don’t mind about transferring it a second before death, or using the obvious tax avoidance routes to eliminate any bill at all.

Talking about gifting before death isn’t really taking it off topic, btw. Gifting is a key part of inheritance tax calculations/rules/etc.
I said I agreed with the current 7 year IHT taper on gifts.
 
I've always thought inheritance tax was a pretty bizarre tax - if the money has been properly taxed going in, then why should it be taxed again when it gets handed to someone else?

Doesn't really bother me anyway as I'd hope my folks spend everything they have before they die!
 
I know. I’m just saying it seems weird really wanting to hit inheritance hard because it’s wrong to not tax unearned wealth, but at the same time being fine with easily avoiding it.
I don't think it is easy to avoid with the 7-year taper. that's a long time in advance you have to go to avoid a lump of tax.

As I said, going without that wealth is a sacrifice and, I suppose, a risk. Especially trying to do it to avoid all IHT by beating the 7-year mark
 
It is when the nil rate band is as it is, and is going to be. And it’s not that long given life expectancies (especially for those who the wealthiest).

It takes a bit of simple planning to avoid it the vast majority of the time, but some people are thick, some don’t want to deal with the issue/talk about money/talk about death, and some die young. Only 5% of estates pay any right now, but most of them could easily avoid it imo. It’s really, really not hard.
Well, that's why it should go to a flat 75% with no nil rate band :)

(I know it'll never happen - too politically suicidal. Just don't understand why it's so unpopular though)
 
How do you deal with gifts? Do you have the same kind of seven year rule as we have now on transfers of money?
To be honest, gifts should be taxed like any other Capital Gains above a certain minimum, say 5k. this does get complex when richer people give generous presents, but really there transfer of cash or assets is a major tax avoidance scheme and it is also nonsensitive. E.g., with income tax you work damn hard 40+ hours a week just to be slammed with a 40% tax rate. Someone gifts you 100K for which you did no work and there is no tax.

Similar with lottery and gaming winnings, much more sensible in the US where these get taxed.
 
Even then it’s easily avoided. Eg. I explained how we could easily get around that with my father. If you introduced it tomorrow he’d just have to get to 74 (but if these had been the standing rules he’d’ve done it years ago just to be safer). You just transfer everything and then pay rent on the home (might necessitate moving home if the pension/house combo is massively out of kilter, but rich people usually have decent pensions...)
Pensions get hit by tax when the pot goes over £1mil :)

£1m pension annuity is only ~ £45k per year. Gets tight if you're paying big market rent on a large property you've gifted early
 
Pensions get hit by tax when the pot goes over £1mil :)

£1m pension annuity is only ~ £45k per year. Gets tight if you're paying big market rent on a large property you've gifted early


whcih is why you should downsize, or move out and rent-out the large property
 
Well, that's why it should go to a flat 75% with no nil rate band :)

(I know it'll never happen - too politically suicidal. Just don't understand why it's so unpopular though)

Problem there is the administration costs... for small estates they'd maybe outweigh the gain from taxing them... I mean I had a grandparent who lived in a a super low rent flat and then lived in a council run care home, she had a few thousand in savings (of which I inherited approx £700) some jewellery and some old ornaments/personal effects in a few boxes at my uncles house. It would be a big waste of everyone time if someone had to check all of that and deduct 75% Would we have to get the sentimental items/old china ornaments valued individually and make sure we paid enough to covert them etc..? I mean her estate was perhaps worth 5k or so tops... it just isn't worth HMRC's time AFAIK.
 
Problem there is the administration costs... for small estates they'd maybe outweigh the gain from taxing them... I mean I had a grandparent who lived in a a super low rent flat and then lived in a council run care home, she had a few thousand in savings (of which I inherited approx £700) some jewellery and some old ornaments/personal effects in a few boxes at my uncles house. It would be a big waste of everyone time if someone had to check all of that and deduct 75% Would we have to get the sentimental items/old china ornaments valued individually and make sure we paid enough to covert them etc..? I mean her estate was perhaps worth 5k or so tops... it just isn't worth HMRC's time AFAIK.
Yeah, you're right. There would need to be a nominal allowance.

One of my grandparents died and there wasn't enough wealth, from all sources (including selling stuff) to cover the funeral costs.
 
Which is why I mentioned that if you have an extremely pricey home then moving would be sensible. If your pension’s £45k then you’re not going to struggle... stay where you are in the vast majority of the country, or move to somewhere a tad smaller (but still blooming nice) if your home’s in the tiny minority of the country you couldn’t rent with that much income.
And that's all fine - but it won't be attractive for everyone. That's a quite sizeable set of adjustments going into your dotage.

And I'm ok with that being enough to avoid IHT. You've sacrificed for that.

(and £45k for someone rich enough to build up a £1mil pension pot isn't much. You still pay income tax on that too)
 
Not really. Still living a great life. Not really missing out by losing five bedrooms you never use in a three storey house where you struggle to get up the stairs. It’s basically what pensioners should do when they get to the latter part of their retirement - move to a nice flat or bungalow. Avoiding millions in inheritance tax.
Then a big IHT rate is also encouraging pensioners to live more suitably. It's win win.

Who do we send our proposal to?
 
Challenging for those parents who want to bequeath equal amounts to their different children. They'd need to constantly update their wills right up until the point of death to ensure equal net distribution. And, let's not forget, it is their money to decide how it is distributed upon their death.

Not really. Each child still get the same amount as each other, they just get taxed on it individually. The one that’s already taken a £50k capital gain that year will have to pay more tax. It could be argued that that tax is then charged on the other gain, so they receive exactly the same amount.

Let’s be clear, I’m not a fan of inheritance tax, but a system that taxes the recipient rather than the donor is a better system in my books.
 
OK but that's sort of like saying that a progressive society would seek to tax every individual such that we all end up with the same net worth at the end of each year.

I do take your point about parental nurturing being extremely important for giving kids a head start, but I'm talking more about the fact that the system is set up so massively to benefit those who receive intergenerational wealth e.g. someone who has a house bought outright for them vs. someone who can only afford to rent because they can't afford a deposit. Which perpetuates the cycle.

But your first example is basically what you’re proposing in the second part. How can you be against the former if you’re for equalizing inheritance?

As already mentioned though the very last point is a bit of a misnomer because inheritance now normally comes when people have already settled down and are already most of the way through a mortgage anyway.
 
If anything a property tax or a Land Value Tax would be another tool to help prevent our housing bubble. If owner/occupiers have to pay say 1% of their property value in tax instead of a council tax -- there's no incentive for property prices to bubble out of control. In fact Labour's 2017 manifesto appeared to have proposals for LVT in it; https://www.theguardian.com/politic...backs-labour-land-tax-solve-uk-housing-crisis

Council tax is utterly redundant. How a tenant in a 2-bed flat in a "nice" area should pay the same as an owner/occupier of a £2m or even £20m house somewhere is laughable. The value of the land or property should be taxed.

It doesn’t seem to have worked here or in many other places it’s used. See Vancouver and Toronto as examples.

To most end users it’s exactly the same as council tax, except rather than bands that haven’t changed in 30 years (there is always discussions on reassessments) it’s a sliding scale based on the “exact” value of your house that year. So that saves two very similar houses ending up with two vastly different bills because they straddle a band.

At least in canada Property tax is also equalized, so as long as you’re house doesn’t go up disproportionately in value then you pay the same tax year after year anyway. Hence why it hasn’t really helped in the places listed above. If all the houses in the city go up 50% in two years (not far off the Vancouver rate) then the property tax on each property is still the same. It only really affects you if you add significant value to your own property (major extension for example) as the value of your property goes up disproportionately.
 
How do you deal with gifts? Do you have the same kind of seven year rule as we have now on transfers of money?
And why should inheritance be any different to capital gains, which is also “unearned” income and taxed at a much lower rate than 75%.
 
Because the person who earned and owns that cash is dead and no longer has any use for it.

So you’re completely honest then that you’re happy with a death tax.

And since when has “use” been a legitimate reason to take money from people? Where does it end? Tha millionaire doesn’t have “use” for the money they just got from selling their second house for 300% more than they bought it for 10 years ago, let’s take 75% of that too (IIRC currently that would be a capital gain and taxed as one).

With capital gains you invest £x from money you’ve earned and paid tax on, then that investments make a profit. You’re taxed on the profit. Why can’t you then give you net profit to your kids?

But anyway, that’s not really addressing what you quoted. If you fancy doing so...

I’m not disagreeing with your quote, just adding to it.
 
So you’re completely honest then that you’re happy with a death tax.

And since when has “use” been a legitimate reason to take money from people? Where does it end? Tha millionaire doesn’t have “use” for the money they just got from selling their second house for 300% more than they bought it for 10 years ago, let’s take 75% of that too (IIRC currently that would be a capital gain and taxed as one).
In a world where taxation is necessary, I'm 100% in favour of death taxes. so yes, completely honest.

A dead person derives precisely zero utility from wealth. They're dead. I believe in a progressive tax system, and dead people have the lowest 'need' of anyone - so tax them the most.
 
And why should inheritance be any different to capital gains, which is also “unearned” income and taxed at a much lower rate than 75%.

estates are subject to capital gains tax

IHT deals with the transfer of assets and is taxed at a rather higher rate than capital gains tax

CGT gives you an annual allowance (currently circa 11k per year) and can be offset by losses you've incurred too, you tally up that allowance over your lifetime and you're allowed rather a lot of gains... on the other hand IHT deals with what are often one off transfers and you have a larger nil rate band/allowance there

IHT is already at 40%, CGT is at 20 and 28%...

I don't think the current IHT system is ideal at all, I do wonder if we're going the wrong way with special exemptions for primary residence etc.. perhaps property would be the one thing that is much simpler to tax, easy record of it being sold etc..and so taxing the transfer of homes/encouraging people to dispose of homes they don't need (it isn't helpful to have lone widowers occupying 5 bedroom detached house) would perhaps be good to see
 
Not really. Each child still get the same amount as each other, they just get taxed on it individually. The one that’s already taken a £50k capital gain that year will have to pay more tax. It could be argued that that tax is then charged on the other gain, so they receive exactly the same amount.

Let’s be clear, I’m not a fan of inheritance tax, but a system that taxes the recipient rather than the donor is a better system in my books.

I get what you're saying but I don't think many parents would see it that way. If they gifted £50,000 to each child during their lifetime, each child would get £50,000. If the same £50,000 was transferred as part of an inheritance then these proposals would see one receive less than the other.

It is very difficult to find the right way forwards. Ultimately, the majority of ideas in this thread are about amending or tweaking the existing system. Perhaps it would be better to look at what outcome is being sought, i.e. is the idea to maintain and / or grow the £6 billion annual income to the exchequer from inheritance tax or is the desired outcome to ensure that inheritances are incentivised to be left to those who pay less tax and therefore arguably could benefit more from the money.

The political answer is of course to take as much money as you can while minimising or reducing the cost to those likely to vote for you. And that broadly describes the thousands of tweaks we've had to the same taxation framework in the UK over the past 50 years.
 
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