Excepted estates - if the death was between 6 April 2023 and 31 August 2023
An 'excepted estate' is an estate where no Inheritance Tax is due. Although there are forms to complete, a full Inheritance Tax account (form IHT400) isn't required.
What qualifies as an excepted estate?
If the deceased person died between 6 April 2023 and 31 August 2006, the estate will generally be an excepted estate if one of the following applies:
- it's a low value estate (see more in the section on low value estates below)
- it's an exempt estate - the deceased person left everything to a spouse or civil partner living in the UK or to a registered UK charity (and the estate is valued at under £1 million)
- the deceased person was a 'foreign domiciliary' - they lived permanently abroad and died abroad and the value of their UK assets was under £100,000
This means you'll probably need to fill in form IHT205 Return of Estate Information (or form C5 in Scotland) as part of the probate process.
What is a low value estate?
To qualify as a low value estate, the estate must meet all the following conditions:
- the value of the estate is less than the Inheritance Tax threshold for the year of death
- any assets that the deceased person benefited from that were held in trust, were in a single trust and the value was less than £100,000
- the value of any foreign assets was less than £75,000
- the value of any 'specified transfers' was less than £100,000 (see the section on specified transfers below)
- the deceased person hadn't made any other gifts within seven years of their death that weren't 'specified transfers'
- the deceased person hadn't made any gifts that they continued to benefit from - these are known as 'gifts with reservation of benefit' (see the section on gifts with reservation of benefit below)
- the deceased person had made the UK their permanent home - they were 'domiciled' in the UK when they died
What is a specified transfer?
Specified transfers are gifts that the deceased person made during their lifetime that were either:
- cash, household and personal goods, quoted shares or securities
- straightforward gifts to an individual of land (but not gifts into trusts)
What is a 'gift with reservation of benefit'?
If the deceased made a gift to someone and still continued to benefit from it - such as a house they gave away but still continued to live in - it is considered a gift with reservation of benefit, and counts as still being part of their estate for Inheritance Tax purposes.