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Taxes
/ Inheritance Tax (HIT) |
Inheritance
Tax (HIT)
A
tax on gifts made by an individual in the seven years before death, and
on the value of assets when he or she dies. The tax rate is 40 per cent,
and it applies to any amount over £255,000 for deaths on or before 6th
April 2004. The calculation
of HIT works as follows.
- On
death, add up the value of everything the deceased owned at the time
of death, including home, investments, savings, and belongings.
- Add
life assurance payments to the total
- Deduct
any debts, including outstanding mortgage amounts.
- Deduct
any bequests which are exempt from HIT
-
Add
any gifts made to third parties in the seven years prior to death
which are not exempt from HIT
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Inheritance tax threshold |
2003-04 (£) |
2004-05 (£) |
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255 000 |
263 000 |
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If
the figure produced is more than the current threshold (£255,000 for
deaths on or before 6th April 2004), the amount of surplus is taxed at
40%. This has to be paid by
the deceased's estate, except for non-exempt gifts to third parties
where the tax has to be paid by the recipient of the gift on a sliding
scale.
Certain
types of gift are exempt from HIT.
The most important of these are (a) gifts between spouses either
during life or on death, which are tax-free.
So if you leave your entire estate to your husband or wife, no
HIT is payable, and (b) gifts to charities.
Some
gifts are tax-free on death. These
include lump sums paid out by a pension scheme provided the trustees
have discretion about who gets the money, and refunds of personal
pension contributions paid directly to a third party or to a trust but
not to the deceased's estate.
And
then there are 'lifetime' gifts that are tax-free or potentially
tax-free:
- small
gifts of up to £250 to any number of people in any one tax year
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gifts
on marriage to a bride or groom. Each parent can give £5,000, each
grandparent and remote relative can give £2,500, and others can
give £1,000.
-
regular
gifts out of normal income that does not affect the donor's standard
of living. This covers birthday presents etc.
-
up
to £3,000 in other gifts in any one tax year. If this exemption is
not used in one tax year, it can be carried forward to the next, but
no further.
-
any
gifts given to an individual more than seven years before the death
of the donor.
It
is the last type of gift that is 'potentially-exempt.'
If the donor does not live for seven years after the date of the
gift, tax will have to be paid.

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