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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Paying IHT

106 replies

waitingforpost · 06/08/2025 18:03

The pension changes means more people will get pulled into the IHT threshold & on here a lot of people talk about their 1m plus homes.

Should the 6 month limit to pay free of interest be increased? Surely most can't pay it until a house is sold?

OP posts:
Viviennemary · 07/08/2025 16:43

Notsuchafattynow · 06/08/2025 19:11

I think you'll get little sympathy tbh. If an estate is large enough for IHT, then it's over 1 mil.

And (if I remember correctly), the first mil is not taxed, only the amount over. So yes, while I imagine it's a pain or difficult to pay it up front, it's on the basis you're about to get significant assets.

Many houses are worth over £1m therse days. And if the person is single(without a deceased spouse) or divorced the allowance is only £500k.

GasPanic · 07/08/2025 16:44

waitingforpost · 07/08/2025 16:37

Google is your friend.

Why bother to write such a stupid comment?

Why bother to ask such a stupid question in the first place, when everyone has the power of knowledge at their fingertips ?

All they need to do is type in the question (sometimes in a few different ways) and google will tell the answer.

And once you have taught someone to do that, they can get an answer to pretty much anything they want.

The difference between just telling someone the answer, and giving them the power to find an answer to any question they might have.

WallaceinAnderland · 07/08/2025 16:46

Probate won't be granted until IHT is paid.

In England probate can be granted before IHT is paid.

We got probate after 8 months.
House took a further 2 years to sell.
IHT was paid in full after the sale of the house.

helibirdcomp · 07/08/2025 16:47

Notsuchafattynow · 06/08/2025 19:11

I think you'll get little sympathy tbh. If an estate is large enough for IHT, then it's over 1 mil.

And (if I remember correctly), the first mil is not taxed, only the amount over. So yes, while I imagine it's a pain or difficult to pay it up front, it's on the basis you're about to get significant assets.

Not 1 million. In the UK, the inheritance tax threshold is £325,000, meaning that estates valued below this amount do not incur any inheritance tax. If you leave your home to direct descendants, this threshold can increase to £500,000. Just because they have inherited does mean they are rich before it is paid out. They could be on UC for all you know. How are they supposed to pay instalments if on a low income. Estate could also be split among multiple siblings so the amount each gets is relatively low even if it is in the inheritance tax bracket

RedRiverShore5 · 07/08/2025 16:47

Unilaterallyinsane · 06/08/2025 19:00

If you are rich enough to go over the IHT threshold, you need to take out an insurance policy which will cover interest before probate is back.

A single person that has a house of just over £325k and a small dc pension is not really rich. They are generally very average, average house price is probably quite near the IHT threshold for a single person

BigSkies2022 · 07/08/2025 16:50

waitingforpost · 06/08/2025 19:01

@Unilaterallyinsane who takes this out? parents?

I did, 13 years ago when we moved to our current house with a 10 year old and realised that if we were both to die in an accident then DS would be left with a large IHT liability at a very vulnerable age. So we took out a whole of life policy, wrote it into trust so that it doesn’t count as part of your taxable estate and this will pay out immediately upon the second death - you have your funds available to pay tax, and nobody has to sell assets in a rush to avoid interest charge.

When we did this, it was a bit niche but these products have become more popular with the changes to rules on IHT and pension pots. Evey financial product has its day in the sun I suppose.

Abra1t · 07/08/2025 16:50

One tip I would give anyone whose parent is likely to leave an estate falling into IHT territory, is to keep cash and investment balances below £25k-£30k (check with the institutions). They will often agree to release these funds to the executors before probate if the executors sign liability forms. This can be very useful not just for paying IHT, but for running a property prior to sale. We were able to get funds from several banks, NS&I and investment funds because the balances were just below the cut-offs.

Worth checking. Don't be tempted to consolidate everything into one or two accounts, which we almost made the mistake of doing. It is time-consuming to wade through all the forms, which all ask for different things, but getting the cash earlier can take some of the stress out of it.

Rentitis · 07/08/2025 16:52

I think it is really interesting how so may people believe that only estates valued at £1 million and over pay IHT. Whereas many people with estates valued at £325000 pay.

Almost as if the government were trying to make us believe that only the super rich pay.

waitingforpost · 07/08/2025 16:53

Why bother to ask such a stupid question in the first place, when everyone has the power of knowledge at their fingertips ?

I don't think it's a stupid question. I wanted personal advice. It's a forum, if everyone googled why would it even exist?

If it's such a stupid question why waste your time on the thread? You must have something better to do!

OP posts:
SmallGoddess · 07/08/2025 16:54

BigSkies2022 · 07/08/2025 16:50

I did, 13 years ago when we moved to our current house with a 10 year old and realised that if we were both to die in an accident then DS would be left with a large IHT liability at a very vulnerable age. So we took out a whole of life policy, wrote it into trust so that it doesn’t count as part of your taxable estate and this will pay out immediately upon the second death - you have your funds available to pay tax, and nobody has to sell assets in a rush to avoid interest charge.

When we did this, it was a bit niche but these products have become more popular with the changes to rules on IHT and pension pots. Evey financial product has its day in the sun I suppose.

DM had one of these. She (or her adviser who I blame more) set it up with herself as the only trustee so we still needed probate to access it . Due to House price inflation it was a relatively small proportion of the bill in the end.

VimtoVimtoVimto · 07/08/2025 16:55

If this is just a hypothetical question OP, book in with a good financial advisor as there are legal ways to avoid paying inheritance tax but they do need to be set up quite far in advance.

I personally consider it daylight robbery. I've earned very single penny (and been taxed on most of it) to pay for my house, so I'm going make damned sure my kids won't pay a penny of inheritance tax. My parents have provisions put in place so that I won't have to either. But if you absolutely do have to then I agree the 6 months limit should start either after probate or after the house sale - anything else is just crazy.

Musicaltheatremum · 07/08/2025 16:55

Schoolchoicesucks · 07/08/2025 16:25

Can I ask a question about the £1m combined threshold for a married couple?

If a married couple between them own a £1m home that they intend to pass onto their children, one of the couple dies and "their £500k" relief is transferred to their surviving spouse. If they then remarry, what happens to the IHT relief pot? Could someone potentially wind up with £1.5m of IHT free relief if they were transferred 2 lots of £500k plus their own £500k relief?

No you don't get extra to pass on. I've remarried and my estate is large at the moment so I will have my late husband's £500k plus mine but if my current husband dies and leaves me his money then no I don't get another £500k to use. I discussed this with my solicitor when making my will

Needpatience · 07/08/2025 17:01

I agree with you OP. It isn’t enough time.

Also it can be difficult for the executor as there is money to pay out, not just on tax, but eg on household bills that suddenly need to be paid and what if you don’t have the money. Just because the estate is large, doesn’t mean you are going to get lots of money as there could be a lot of beneficiaries.

JustPinkFinch · 07/08/2025 17:17

It all seems back to front to me.

So you're paying IHT on an estate value that hasn't been realised yet? Essentially going off a house valuation that could end up being under or over. Under more likely at the moment I wold guess.

I wonder how long HMRC take to refund if you overpay 🤔

BigSkies2022 · 07/08/2025 17:33

SmallGoddess · 07/08/2025 16:54

DM had one of these. She (or her adviser who I blame more) set it up with herself as the only trustee so we still needed probate to access it . Due to House price inflation it was a relatively small proportion of the bill in the end.

Edited

That’s a shame. We’ve set it up with DS as one of the trustees, so should have no problem. The policy is index-linked, and while no-one can predict the future, it seems that the years of mega house price inflation are behind us.

I think we’ve done what we can to protect DS’ position in a cost-effective way, based on all the information we had at the time. You can only do your best. I’m hoping to be in a position to give him a chunk of our assets while we’re still young enough to live the seven years after. But who knows what future tax policy holds? IHT brought in record amounts last year, apparently- can’t see any chancellor wanting to give that up soon.

Abra1t · 07/08/2025 19:21

JustPinkFinch · 07/08/2025 17:17

It all seems back to front to me.

So you're paying IHT on an estate value that hasn't been realised yet? Essentially going off a house valuation that could end up being under or over. Under more likely at the moment I wold guess.

I wonder how long HMRC take to refund if you overpay 🤔

They took four months for us. House sold for less than probate value at the end of March. We had overpaid in September last year and we received the refund in July, four months after the forms went in. I chased quite a bit. We did get some interest.

WallaceinAnderland · 07/08/2025 21:12

I wonder how long HMRC take to refund if you overpay

They took 6 months to repay us.

Holidaytimeyay · 07/08/2025 21:29

DancingFerret · 06/08/2025 23:57

Unless the estate is very complicated (trusts, overseas assets, offshore accounts, etc), the received wisdom is not to appoint banks or solicitors (or, indeed, any third party professional) as an executor. Their fees tend to be on the heavy side, and the time taken to obtain probate is often a lot longer than the DIY option.

This is good advice, my relative appointed a very expensive solicitor, they charged £75,000 in expenses and put a charge on the property to make sure that they were paid. This was years ago as well!

roses2 · 07/08/2025 21:31

I don't get this - what if the houses sells for less and you end up paying tax on the original estimate?

22mumsynet · 07/08/2025 21:32

Musicaltheatremum · 07/08/2025 16:55

No you don't get extra to pass on. I've remarried and my estate is large at the moment so I will have my late husband's £500k plus mine but if my current husband dies and leaves me his money then no I don't get another £500k to use. I discussed this with my solicitor when making my will

This isn’t quite correct. With the right planning if you have been widowed then it is possible to get over the £1m allowance. Eg H1 + W. H1 dies. W inherits H1’s Nil rate band and residence nil rate band (NRB). she remarries. If their wills are planned so that if H2 dies first, his NRB is ‘used’ on gift to children or trust, when W dies she can still claim her own NRB and that inherited from H1. If W dies first she needs to ‘use’ her NRB and that inherited from H1. Then when H2 dies he can use his own. So it is possible to get 3x NRBs or even 4 if both have been previously widowed. Quite specific circumstances and high values involved but it is possible.

22mumsynet · 07/08/2025 21:39

roses2 · 07/08/2025 21:31

I don't get this - what if the houses sells for less and you end up paying tax on the original estimate?

If sold within 4 years you can claim loss on sale relief. www.gov.uk/government/publications/inheritance-tax-claim-for-relief-loss-on-sale-of-land-iht38

ChildFreeAndOhSoHappy · 08/08/2025 00:05

It's absolute theft. Luckily, my inheritance is not in the UK and I won't have to deal with the UK bs, but I think the smartest thing to do would be to sign over your property and assets to your children (if you plan to give it to them, of course, not if you don't) in your 60s and just have an agreement with them that you can access it till you die. That or use a trust, though I dont know much about trusts in the UK since I have no dependents.

C152 · 08/08/2025 09:14

@Unilaterallyinsane I guess it's all relative, but I don't consider owning a property/having assets worth the IHT threshold of £325k (or £500k if the deceased leaves their estate to their children or grandchildren) having "all that money". Again, it's all situational, but pretty much every property in London is worth more than that. It doesn't mean the single parents working p-t minimum wage jobs and living in small, one bedroom flats are loaded.

@waitingforpost I fundamentally disagree with paying IHT and I resent more the way HMRC uses everything related to death as a revenue raising exercise. No interest should be paid at all. If all the IHT is wrapped up in a property, HMRC should simply put something like a lien on the property, ensuring they are paid first once it sells. (No doubt rules would have to be put in place for some form of time limit/way to pay IHT if those inheriting don't wish to sell the property - 6 momths is far too short - but if it's up for sale, it's not the seller's fault if there's little interest or the ridiculous, unnecessary bureaucracy involved in buying/selling property in the UK holds things up.)

SmallGoddess · 08/08/2025 10:18

@C152 The ten annual installments I mentioned above are already an option for those who do not wish to sell the house. And I do think there should be some disincentive to leaving it on the market for years at a ridiculous asking price.

mondaytosunday · 08/08/2025 13:20

@ChildFreeAndOhSoHappythat only works if you do NOT benefit from the gift. I can’t sign over my house to my child and still live in it - I’m benefiting from the asset so it is still counted as part of the estate. Otherwise everyone would sign it over.
In my case one child is at uni and one child is working but paid just over minimum wage. Could they get a loan based on future assets? Yes, but interest on beneficiary loans are about 25%.
But it make no sense requiring IHT to be paid BEFORE that asset is realised - it creates a catch-22 situation. It is supposed to be the estate paying the tax after all, not the beneficiaries The tax should be tied to the sale, much like how capital gains tax is required within X days of a sale. Even if a house sold on the first day on the market it may still take some months to complete, and getting the probate is often the delay so there needs to be some facility of granting the probate or allowing the sale with taxes owing rather than paid out before.
I suppose the HMRC thinks of they don’t get their money till the house is sold and they grant probate so the house CAN be sold, the beneficiaries could just delay selling the house, as the executors are often the beneficiaries. It is still the estate selling the house, so why not just let it be sold? It is still reasonable to set some sort of deadline. So I would suggest granting probate or allowing the property to be sold, but any liquid assets in the estate used to pay whatever amount owing if available. Then on the sale of the property the HMRC automatically gets the remaining amount, much like how the estate agent and mortgage providers gets their share distributed by the solicitor. The deadline should be 18 months from death to pay, with interest accruing from 12 months after death. That should be long enough to sell most houses. But the ability to realise the asset the tax is based on seems reasonable and just and plain common sense.