Loss to estate | £300,000 |
BPR @ 50% | (£150,000) |
Value transferred | £150,000 |
Annual exemption | (£3,000) |
Chargeable transfer | £147,000 |
IHT & Estate Planning
Last Updated: 6 Apr 24 4 min read
1. Key Points
2. Annual limit
3. Legislation
5. Multiple transfers on different days
6. Multiple transfers on the same day
An individual's lifetime transfers are exempt up to a total of £3,000 in each tax year.
The level of this “annual exemption” has remained unchanged since 1981.
The relevant legislation is comprised in the Inheritance Tax Act 1984 section 19.
If a transfer of value is more than the amount of the available exemption:
If the transfer qualifies for agricultural relief or business relief the annual exemption is deducted from the value transferred after reliefs have been granted.
Example of the annual exemption interacting with Business Property Relief (BPR)
Arthur makes a lifetime transfer of factory premises to the trustees of a discretionary trust. The property is valued at £300,000.
The transfer qualifies for 50% BPR.
The only exemption available is the annual exemption for the year.
The amount of the immediately chargeable transfer is:
Loss to estate | £300,000 |
BPR @ 50% | (£150,000) |
Value transferred | £150,000 |
Annual exemption | (£3,000) |
Chargeable transfer | £147,000 |
If the transferor has made transfers to more than one person on different days in the same tax year, then the annual exemption is applied “in date order”.
For example, on 1 July 2024 Bert gave £4,000 to Brenda. On 2 August 2024 Bert gave £8,000 to Bronwen. Bert died on 1 December 2024.
All of the annual exemption is applied against the gift to Brenda made on 1 July 2024.
If the transferor has made transfers to more than one person on the same day the exemption is apportioned between them.
For example, Colin makes transfers of £4,000 to Cora and £8,000 to Clare on 3 September 2024. The annual exemption is apportioned as follows;
Any part of the annual exemption which is not used in the tax year is carried forward (rolled-over) into the following tax year. It can only be carried forward to the next year and cannot be used in any later years. The annual exemption is applied in the following order
Example of the one year carry forward ruleXavier makes the following gifts:
2022-23The gift of £1,600 is wholly covered by that year’s annual exemption. £1,400 is carried forward to 2023-24. 2023-24The gift of £2,200 is wholly covered by the current year’s annual exemption. The unused balance of £800 is carried forward to 2024-25. The surplus of £1,400 brought forward from 2022-23 is not used and so is “lost”. 2024-25The £3,000 for the current year and £800 carried forward from 2023-24 are available. Of the £5,000 gift, £3,800 is exempt. The balance of £1,200 is a potentially exempt transfer. |
Attempts are sometimes made to exploit the annual exemption:
HMRC will challenge such strategies in worthwhile cases. In most cases the costs of setting up and operating these arrangements outweigh the potential tax savings.
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