Inheritance tax receipts continued their upward trajectory in the nine months from April to December 2024 as they hit £6.3bn, up £600 compared with the same period in 2023, according to HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
In 2023-4 tax year, HMRC raised £7.499bn, but these figures show that they are well on track to exceed this figure. Currently just 4% of estates are liable for inheritance tax, but government estimates suggest that this will increase to 10% of estates by 2030.
Nicholas Hyett, Investment Manager at Wealth Club, said: “Inheritance tax continues to be something of a golden goose for HMRC – with a tax take that seems to rise inexorably. It may only affect a small number of estates at present, but that number is growing all the time – suggesting “Britain’s most hated tax” is only set to become more unpopular.
“What really gets to many people about inheritance tax is the double taxation. You’re taxed on the money when you earn it and again when you die, resulting in combined income tax and inheritance tax rate of 67% for additional rate tax payers – potentially more if you’re also paying National Insurance.
“One way to avoid the taxman having your cake and eating it too, is to make gifts out of surplus income. By making regular gifts out of leftover income at the end of the month you can pass money on to your loved ones free of inheritance tax.
“Gifts out of surplus income are particularly popular with grandparents, who use it to pay for things like school or university fees. Avoiding double taxation from inheritance tax is a nice added sweetener.”
Changes to Inheritance tax announced at the Autumn Budget included:
- An extension to the freeze on IHT thresholds, which have been frozen for a further two years (until 2030).
- Agricultural Relief and Business Property Relief have been reformed, meaning that from April 2026, the first £1m of qualifying combined assets will have no inheritance tax at all, but for assets overt £1m a 50% relief will apply, at an effective rate of 20%.
- Qualifying AIM shares will no longer have full exemption from IHT, instead from 2026 they will have an inheritance tax rate of 20% if they are held for two years.
- From 6th April 2027, inherited pensions could be subject to inheritance tax in addition to income tax levied on the recipient meaning passed down pensions could be taxed at an effective rate of up to 67% – subject to consultation.