
UK Inheritance Tax Calculator
Calculate your potential inheritance tax liability across England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland with real-time estimates for 2025/26
Inheritance tax in England follows standard UK rules administered by HMRC. Key considerations:
- Joint tenancy property automatically passes to surviving owner
- Probate required for estates over £5,000
- Will must comply with Wills Act 1837
Your Allowance Breakdown
| Allowance | Status | Amount |
|---|
Seven-Year Taper Relief
If you die within 7 years of making a gift, the gift may be subject to inheritance tax. Taper relief reduces the tax rate based on how long you survive after making the gift.
| Years | Tax Rate | Reduction | On Your Gift |
|---|
IHT Thresholds 2025/26
| Threshold | Description | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Nil-Rate Band | Standard tax-free allowance per person | £325,000 |
| Residence Nil-Rate Band | Additional allowance for main residence to direct descendants | £175,000 |
| Combined Individual | Maximum for individual passing home to children | £500,000 |
| Combined Couple | Maximum for married couple with transferable allowances | £1,000,000 |
| RNRB Taper Threshold | Estate value where RNRB begins to reduce | £2,000,000 |
| Standard IHT Rate | Rate applied to taxable estate | 40% |
| Reduced Rate (Charity) | Rate if 10% or more left to charity | 36% |
Country-Specific Guidance
UK Inheritance Tax Calculator: Complete Guide to Estate Planning and IHT Calculations
Inheritance Tax (IHT) is one of the most significant taxes affecting wealth transfer in the United Kingdom. Often called the “death tax,” IHT applies to the estate of someone who has died, including all property, possessions, and money. Understanding how inheritance tax works is essential for effective estate planning and ensuring your loved ones receive the maximum possible inheritance. This comprehensive guide explains everything you need to know about UK inheritance tax, including current thresholds, exemptions, reliefs, and strategies to minimise your liability.
The UK inheritance tax system applies uniformly across England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, though Scottish residents may have additional considerations regarding their estate planning due to differences in property and succession law. Whether you own a modest estate or substantial assets, understanding IHT calculations helps you make informed decisions about lifetime gifts, trusts, and will planning.
Understanding Inheritance Tax Thresholds for 2025/26
The inheritance tax threshold, known as the nil-rate band, determines how much of an estate can be passed on tax-free. For the 2025/26 tax year, the nil-rate band remains at £325,000, a level frozen since 2009. This threshold applies to individuals regardless of their location within the UK, whether England, Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland.
In addition to the standard nil-rate band, eligible estates may benefit from the residence nil-rate band (RNRB), which provides an additional allowance when passing on a main residence to direct descendants. The RNRB stands at £175,000 for 2025/26, potentially increasing the tax-free threshold to £500,000 for qualifying individuals.
Married couples and civil partners enjoy significant advantages under IHT rules. Any unused nil-rate band from a deceased spouse or civil partner can be transferred to the surviving partner, effectively doubling the available threshold. This means a married couple could potentially pass on up to £1,000,000 tax-free when the RNRB applies to both partners.
The nil-rate band has been frozen at £325,000 since 2009 and is currently set to remain at this level until at least April 2028. With property values and inflation rising, more estates are being drawn into the inheritance tax net each year, making proactive planning increasingly important.
How the Residence Nil-Rate Band Works
The residence nil-rate band (RNRB) was introduced in April 2017 to help families pass on their home to the next generation without inheritance tax. This additional allowance applies specifically when you leave your main residence to direct descendants, including children, grandchildren, and their spouses or civil partners.
To qualify for the full RNRB, several conditions must be met. The property must have been your residence at some point, and it must pass to qualifying beneficiaries upon death. The deceased must have owned the property, either outright or as a share if it was jointly owned. Step-children, adopted children, and foster children all count as direct descendants for RNRB purposes.
The RNRB is subject to a tapered withdrawal for estates exceeding £2 million. For every £2 of estate value above this threshold, the RNRB reduces by £1. This means the RNRB is completely eliminated when an estate reaches £2.35 million for an individual, or when the combined estate of a couple reaches this level on second death.
Sarah’s estate is valued at £2.2 million, and she is leaving her home to her children. Her estate exceeds the £2 million threshold by £200,000. The RNRB reduction is £200,000 divided by 2 = £100,000. Therefore, Sarah’s available RNRB is £175,000 – £100,000 = £75,000, rather than the full £175,000.
Gifts and the Seven-Year Rule
One of the most common inheritance tax planning strategies involves making lifetime gifts. Gifts made during your lifetime can fall outside your estate for IHT purposes, but the timing and nature of these gifts significantly impact their tax treatment. Understanding the seven-year rule is crucial for effective gift planning.
When you make a gift, it becomes a potentially exempt transfer (PET). If you survive for seven years after making the gift, it falls completely outside your estate and no inheritance tax is due on that amount. However, if you die within seven years of making the gift, it may become chargeable to IHT, with the amount of tax depending on when during those seven years death occurred.
The taper relief system reduces the IHT rate on gifts made between three and seven years before death. Gifts made within three years of death are taxed at the full 40% rate. Gifts made between three and four years before death attract tax at 32%. This rate continues to decrease: 24% for gifts between four and five years, 16% for gifts between five and six years, and 8% for gifts between six and seven years before death.
Annual Gift Exemptions and Allowances
The UK tax system provides several annual exemptions that allow you to make tax-free gifts regardless of the seven-year rule. These exemptions reset each tax year and can be valuable tools for gradually reducing your estate value over time.
The annual exemption allows you to give away up to £3,000 each tax year without any IHT implications. This exemption can be carried forward for one year only, meaning if you did not use your annual exemption last year, you could potentially give away £6,000 this year. Each spouse or civil partner has their own annual exemption, allowing couples to give away £6,000 per year collectively, or £12,000 if using carried-forward exemptions.
Small gifts exemption permits unlimited gifts of up to £250 per person per tax year. You can make as many £250 gifts as you like to different people, but you cannot combine this with the annual exemption for the same recipient. Wedding or civil partnership gifts have their own exemptions: parents can give up to £5,000, grandparents up to £2,500, and anyone else up to £1,000.
Gifts made from surplus income, rather than capital, can be completely exempt from IHT regardless of amount, provided they form part of your normal expenditure, are made from income rather than capital, and do not affect your standard of living. Keeping detailed records of income and gifts is essential to claim this exemption.
Spouse and Civil Partner Exemption
Transfers between spouses and civil partners are completely exempt from inheritance tax, regardless of value. This means you can leave your entire estate to your spouse or civil partner without any IHT liability. This exemption is one of the most valuable in the inheritance tax system and forms the basis of much estate planning for married couples.
The spouse exemption also applies to lifetime gifts, meaning couples can freely transfer assets between themselves to optimise ownership for tax planning purposes. However, while spousal transfers are tax-free, they may simply defer the IHT liability to when the surviving spouse dies, rather than eliminating it entirely.
For couples where one partner is not UK-domiciled, special rules apply. The exemption for transfers to a non-domiciled spouse is limited to £325,000, unless the non-domiciled spouse elects to be treated as UK-domiciled for IHT purposes. This election is irrevocable and has significant implications, so professional advice is essential before making this choice.
Charitable Donations and the Reduced Rate
Leaving money to charity in your will provides a double benefit for inheritance tax purposes. First, any amount left to qualifying charities is completely exempt from IHT. Second, if you leave at least 10% of your net estate to charity, the IHT rate on the remaining taxable estate reduces from 40% to 36%.
The 10% test for the reduced rate is calculated on the baseline amount, which is the estate value after deducting the nil-rate band, RNRB, and other exemptions but before the charitable donation itself. This calculation can be complex, especially for estates with multiple assets in different categories.
The reduced rate can result in the same amount passing to non-charity beneficiaries while increasing the charitable donation. In some cases, leaving a slightly larger charitable gift can actually benefit other beneficiaries by triggering the reduced rate. Financial modelling is recommended to optimise the charitable legacy.
James has an estate worth £800,000. After his nil-rate band of £325,000, his taxable estate is £475,000. If he leaves no charitable gift, IHT would be £475,000 x 40% = £190,000. If he leaves 10% to charity (£47,500), IHT on the remaining £427,500 at 36% = £153,900. Total to beneficiaries: £800,000 – £47,500 – £153,900 = £598,600, compared to £610,000 without the gift. However, if the charitable proportion were adjusted strategically, different outcomes might emerge.
Business Property Relief
Business Property Relief (BPR) can significantly reduce or eliminate inheritance tax on qualifying business assets. This relief was introduced to prevent family businesses from being broken up to pay inheritance tax and to encourage business ownership and entrepreneurship.
BPR is available at 100% on qualifying unquoted company shares, including shares in companies listed on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM), and on business assets used in a sole trade or partnership. BPR at 50% applies to controlling shareholdings in quoted companies and to land, buildings, or machinery owned personally but used in a business you control.
To qualify for BPR, the business assets must have been owned for at least two years before death. The business must be a trading business rather than one that mainly deals with investments, land, or property. Certain businesses are excluded, including those dealing mainly with securities, stocks, shares, land or buildings, or making or holding investments.
Shares in companies listed on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) can qualify for 100% Business Property Relief if the company is trading and shares have been held for two years. This makes AIM investments an attractive option for inheritance tax planning, though they carry higher investment risk than main market shares.
Agricultural Property Relief
Agricultural Property Relief (APR) provides inheritance tax relief on the agricultural value of qualifying farmland and farm buildings. Like BPR, this relief was designed to help family farms pass between generations without being broken up to pay tax.
APR is available at 100% if the land was occupied by the owner for agricultural purposes for at least two years before death, or if the land was owned for at least seven years and farmed by someone else. APR at 50% applies where neither condition is met but the land qualifies as agricultural property.
The relief applies only to the agricultural value of the property, not the development value or value for alternative uses. Farmhouses qualify for APR only if they are character appropriate, meaning their size and nature is appropriate for the farming activity. Luxury farmhouses or those disproportionate to the farming operation may not qualify.
Calculating Your Estate Value
Accurate estate valuation is fundamental to inheritance tax planning. Your estate includes everything you own at death, including property, savings, investments, personal possessions, and any assets held in trust where you retained an interest. Life insurance policies written in trust for beneficiaries are generally excluded from your estate.
Property valuation should reflect open market value at the date of death. Joint property is valued based on your share, which for jointly owned property passing by survivorship may be discounted from a simple 50% split. Business interests, private company shares, and unusual assets may require professional valuation.
Debts and liabilities reduce your estate value. This includes mortgages, loans, credit card balances, and funeral expenses. However, debts must be genuine and owed at death. Deferred debts or those created primarily to reduce inheritance tax may be challenged by HMRC.
Trusts and Inheritance Tax
Trusts play an important role in inheritance tax planning, though their tax treatment has become more complex following changes in 2006. The main types of trusts relevant for IHT are bare trusts, interest in possession trusts, and discretionary trusts, each with different tax implications.
Bare trusts and those where the beneficiary has an immediate right to income (interest in possession trusts created before March 2006) are treated as part of the beneficiary’s estate for IHT. Discretionary trusts and post-2006 interest in possession trusts are subject to the relevant property regime, with a 20% entry charge if the transfer exceeds available nil-rate band, plus ten-yearly charges and exit charges.
Despite the complexity, trusts remain useful for protecting assets, providing for vulnerable beneficiaries, and managing wealth across generations. The nil-rate band discretionary trust, created on death through a will, can preserve the deceased’s nil-rate band while giving trustees flexibility about distributions.
Life Insurance and IHT Planning
Life insurance can be a valuable tool for inheritance tax planning, either to provide funds to pay an expected IHT bill or to replace wealth lost to tax. The key is ensuring the policy is structured correctly so that it achieves its intended purpose.
A life insurance policy written in trust for beneficiaries falls outside the policyholder’s estate and pays out directly to the trustees or beneficiaries. Without the trust, the policy proceeds would form part of the estate, potentially increasing the IHT liability. Existing policies can often be assigned to trust, though tax advice should be sought first.
Whole of life policies provide certainty that a payout will occur, as they continue until death rather than for a fixed term. Joint life second death policies are popular for married couples, as they pay out only when the second partner dies, which is typically when IHT becomes due.
Paying Inheritance Tax
Inheritance tax is normally due within six months of the end of the month in which death occurred. For example, if someone dies in March, IHT would be due by 30 September. Interest is charged on late payments, and penalties may apply for significant delays.
IHT must normally be paid before probate is granted, which can create cash flow difficulties when the estate consists mainly of property or illiquid assets. Some banks allow limited access to deceased account holders’ funds specifically to pay IHT, and HMRC offers instalment options for certain assets.
Property and certain other assets can be paid in ten annual instalments, though interest continues to accrue on the unpaid balance. This option is particularly useful when selling property would be disadvantageous or when beneficiaries wish to retain family assets.
Regional Considerations: Scotland
While inheritance tax itself is a UK-wide tax administered by HMRC, Scotland has distinct succession law that affects estate planning. Scottish law does not recognise the concept of joint tenancy with right of survivorship for property, instead using a different system of property ownership.
Scottish residents may also be affected by legal rights under the Succession (Scotland) Act 1964, which gives children and spouses fixed rights to a portion of moveable estate regardless of will provisions. These prior rights and legal rights must be considered when planning estates that include Scottish property or residents.
The interaction between Scottish succession law and UK inheritance tax can be complex, particularly for estates spanning multiple jurisdictions or involving agricultural or business property in Scotland. Professional advice from advisers familiar with both systems is recommended.
Planning Strategies to Reduce IHT
Effective inheritance tax planning typically involves a combination of strategies tailored to individual circumstances. The most appropriate approach depends on factors including age, health, family situation, asset types, and attitude to risk and complexity.
Lifetime gifting remains one of the most effective strategies, particularly for those in good health who can survive seven years beyond major gifts. Annual exemptions should be used consistently, and larger gifts considered where the seven-year survival period is likely. Gifts with reservation rules must be avoided, as these keep assets in the estate despite the apparent transfer.
Restructuring asset ownership between spouses can optimise use of both nil-rate bands and ensure the RNRB is available on both deaths. Investment choices can incorporate assets qualifying for BPR, such as AIM shares, though investment risk must be carefully considered alongside tax benefits.
A gift with reservation occurs when you give away an asset but continue to benefit from it, such as giving your home to your children while continuing to live in it rent-free. Such gifts remain in your estate for IHT purposes. Paying full market rent can avoid this rule, but the payments must be genuine and at commercial rates.
Record Keeping and Documentation
Maintaining accurate records is essential for inheritance tax purposes. Executors will need details of all assets, debts, and lifetime gifts to complete the inheritance tax return. Poor record keeping can lead to incorrect tax calculations, penalties, and family disputes.
Gift records should include the date, recipient, value, and nature of each gift, plus evidence of annual exemptions used. For gifts from income, detailed records of all income sources and regular expenditure are needed to demonstrate the exemption applies. Property valuations, business accounts, and trust documentation should all be retained.
A letter of wishes accompanying your will can provide guidance to executors and trustees about your intentions, asset locations, and contact details for professional advisers. While not legally binding, this document can save significant time and expense during estate administration.
When to Seek Professional Advice
While this calculator and guide provide general information about inheritance tax, professional advice is recommended for estates of significant value, complex family situations, business or agricultural interests, and cross-border issues.
Financial advisers can help with investment strategies incorporating IHT planning. Solicitors specialising in wills, trusts, and estate planning can ensure legal documents achieve your objectives. Tax advisers and accountants can model different scenarios and help with compliance. The cost of professional advice is usually modest compared to potential tax savings.
It is particularly important to seek advice before making major gifts, establishing trusts, or restructuring business interests. Many IHT planning strategies are irreversible, and mistakes can have significant financial consequences for your family.
Common Mistakes in IHT Planning
Several common mistakes can undermine inheritance tax planning efforts. Failing to use annual exemptions consistently is one of the simplest errors. Over a lifetime, regular use of the £3,000 annual exemption alone can remove tens of thousands of pounds from your taxable estate.
Making gifts with reservation is another frequent mistake. Giving away assets while retaining benefit keeps them in your estate and may also create income tax complications. Understanding the detailed rules around gifts with reservation is essential before making significant transfers.
Relying solely on the spouse exemption without further planning often results in larger tax bills on the second death. While the first death may be tax-free, the surviving spouse’s estate may be significantly above available thresholds, particularly with property price growth.
Future Changes to Inheritance Tax
Inheritance tax rules have changed significantly over the years, and further changes remain possible. The nil-rate band freeze has been extended multiple times, and both increases and decreases to thresholds have been discussed in political debates.
Business Property Relief and Agricultural Property Relief have faced calls for reform, with some arguing they are too generous to the wealthy and create planning opportunities unavailable to most. Any changes to these reliefs could significantly impact business and farm succession planning.
Planning for inheritance tax should therefore balance certainty and flexibility. Strategies that work within current rules while retaining ability to adapt to future changes are generally preferable to aggressive positions that may become ineffective or create unintended consequences.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
Inheritance tax planning is an essential component of comprehensive financial planning, particularly as the frozen nil-rate band draws more estates into the IHT net each year. Understanding the available thresholds, exemptions, and reliefs allows you to make informed decisions about how to structure your estate for maximum benefit to your beneficiaries.
The key elements of effective IHT planning include making full use of annual exemptions, considering the timing and structure of lifetime gifts, ensuring the residence nil-rate band is available where possible, and optimising ownership between spouses. More sophisticated strategies involving trusts, business property, or charitable giving may be appropriate for larger estates.
While this calculator provides a useful estimate of your potential inheritance tax liability, professional advice is recommended for any significant estate planning decisions. Tax rules can change, and individual circumstances vary widely. A qualified financial adviser or solicitor specialising in estate planning can help you develop a strategy tailored to your specific situation and goals.