Inheritance tax
Inheritance tax (IHT) is usually paid when somebody
dies if their estate – including any assets
held in trust and gifts made within the seven
years prior to death – is valued over the
IHT nil rate band (currently £312,000 in
2008-09). IHT is paid at 40 per cent on anything
over this threshold.
IHT may also sometimes be payable on trusts
or gifts made during someone’s lifetime.
Married couples and registered civil partners
can increase the threshold on their estate when
the second partner dies to as much as £624,000
(in 2008-09) by transferring the first spouse
or civil partner’s unused nil rate band
to the second spouse or civil partner when they
die.
How to pay: Generally speaking,
IHT must be paid within six months of the end
of the month in which the deceased died. After
this, interest will be charged on the amount
outstanding.
IHT can be paid in annual installments over
ten years if the value of the estate is tied
up in property such as a house.
Typically, the executor or personal representative
of the deceased person pays the IHT using funds
from the deceased’s estate.
If assets are within, or have been transferred
into, a trust, the trustees are usually responsible
for paying IHT. Sometimes people who have received
gifts, or who inherit from the deceased, have
to pay IHT but this is not common.
Seeking professional advice is a wise step to
ensuring that your financial affairs are as tax-efficient
as possible.
For more information visit http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/inheritancetax/intro/basics.htm
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