Reform set to cut complexity of inheritance tax
Reform set to cut complexity of inheritance tax
Proposed
changes could have far-reaching implications for future estate tax planning
Sweeping
reform of inheritance tax has been recommended to cut complexity of the
so-called ‘death tax’, but experts are warning that individuals will need to review
existing planning if the changes go ahead.
Headline
recommendations to government from the Office of Tax Simplification (OTS) include
changing the rules surrounding gifts of cash, property and other assets made while
someone is still alive, and an overhaul of the relationship between IHT and
capital gains tax for farm and business assets.
Proposals include
a simplification of the lifetime gift exemptions to a single personal gift
allowance, with a revised threshold for small gifts and reform of the regular
gift out of income exemption. The OTS also
recommends that the current seven-year gifting rule for potentially exempt
transfers be cut to five years. This is
the period which must elapse from the date a lifetime gift is made until the
date of death for the gift to be exempt from inheritance tax. This would also see an end to the complicated
taper relief by which the tax charged on gifts may be gradually reduced from
year three of the current seven-year period.
The OTS also proposes that
where IHT is due on lifetime gifts, the rules on who is liable to pay the tax
should be simplified, and how the £325,000 threshold is allocated between
different recipients.
“Wills may need to be re-written to benefit from any tax
reform that takes place, as someone who has drawn up their will to reflect the
current regime may risk a very different outcome to what was intended if their
estate is taxed under the new regime,” said inheritance, wills and trusts expert Andrew Birchall, of Gamlins Law Ltd.
“That will certainly be the case if the rules change on where
liability for tax falls between those receiving lifetime gifts and those who
inherit on death, with some of the proposals on allocation of liability having
wider implications that will need to be considered.”
Also in the
spotlight for reform is the relationship between inheritance tax and capital
gains tax in the reliefs available for businesses and farms.
Added Andrew Birchall: “When it comes to passing on a farm or a
business, different tests are applied depending on whether the disposal is
following death or during lifetime, as the rules are different for inheritance
tax and capital gains tax. It is very complex
and has an impact on decision making because of the different tax outcomes for effectively
the same action.”
Another factor to
consider in any future inheritance planning is the government’s pledge to
extend civil partnerships to opposite-sex couples, following the Supreme Court
ruling that restricting them to same-sex couples was discriminatory. Proposals are currently out for consultation,
but the Government Equalities Office has said they hope that the option will be
available by the end of 2019. The
right to enter into a civil partnership would give opposite-sex couples the
same inheritance tax exemptions as those enjoyed by married couples and same-sex
civil partners.
The OTS is the independent
adviser on simplifying the UK tax system, making recommendations for government
to consider and the consultation
and subsequent reporting on inheritance tax was undertaken in response to a request from the
Chancellor of the Exchequer in January 2018. The first report was published in November 2018, examining the administrative process,
while the second report tackles how the tax is currently implemented.
Proposals put forward by the OTS in
the first stage of their review of inheritance tax included simplified
administration of the process, reducing or removing the requirement to submit
forms for smaller or simpler estates, especially where there is no tax to pay,
and looking to automate the system by bringing it online.
ENDS
Web site content
note:
This is not legal advice; it is intended to provide
information of general interest about current legal issues.
Comments
Post a Comment