Inheritance Tax is the tax that is paid on your 'estate'. Broadly speaking this is everything you own at the time of your death, less what you owe. It's also sometimes payable on assets you may have given away during your lifetime. Assets include things like property, possessions, money and investments.
Not everyone pays Inheritance Tax on death. It only applies if the taxable value of your estate (including your share of any jointly owned assets and assets held in some types of trusts) when you die is above £312,000 (2008-2009 tax year). It is only payable on the excess above this nil rate band.
There are also a number of exemptions which allow you to pass on amounts (during your lifetime or in your will) without any Inheritance Tax being due, for example:
Transfers of assets into most trusts and companies are subject to an immediate Inheritance Tax charge if they exceed the Inheritance Tax nil rate band (taking into account the previous seven years' chargeable gifts and transfers). Read our related article Inheritance Tax on transfers into trusts and companies. The rest of the current article deals with Inheritance Tax on an individual's estate on death.
Inheritance Tax is charged at the following rate on death:
| Inheritance Tax | 2008-2009 tax year |
|---|---|
| Taxable value of your estate above which it is charged | £312,000 |
| Rate at which it is charged | 40% |
The 'personal representative' (the person nominated to handle the affairs of the deceased person) arranges to pay any Inheritance Tax that is due.
You usually nominate the personal representative in your will (you can nominate more than one), in which case they are known as the 'executor'. If you die without leaving a will a court can nominate the personal representative, in which case they are known as the 'administrator'.
If you have been nominated as someone's personal representative you have to value all of the assets that the deceased person owned. This valuation must accurately reflect what the assets would reasonably fetch in the open market at the date of death.
In most cases, Inheritance Tax must be paid within six months from the end of the month in which the death occurs, otherwise interest is charged on the amount owing.
Tax on some assets, including land and buildings, can be deferred and paid in instalments over 10 years.
| Country in which the deceased person lived | Required forms for excepted estates |
|---|---|
| England | Form IHT205 and form PA1 - application for probate |
| Scotland | Form C1 ('Inventory') and form C5 if they died on or after 6 April 2004; if they died before this date form C1 only |
| Northern Ireland | Form IH205 only |
The helpnotes to the forms tell you where to send them. If the deceased person was domiciled abroad different forms (and some restrictions) apply - follow the links below for full details.
In this case you complete form IHT200 plus any relevant supplementary forms (these are indicated on the IHT200).
You also complete:
(In Northern Ireland you only complete a probate application form at interview.)
The help notes on IHT200 tell you where to send the forms and next steps.
Read HMRC's Customer Guide to Inheritance Tax.
The Probate and Inheritance Tax helpline: 0845 3020 900 (open from 9.00 am to 5.00 pm Monday to Friday).
If you have a potentially large estate you should seek professional advice. It's also a good idea to make a will, nominating someone you trust to act as your personal representative.