Can I Avoid Inheritance Tax Through A Loan?

Published date10 July 2023
Subject MatterTax, Inheritance Tax, Income Tax, Capital Gains Tax
Law FirmThomson Snell & Passmore
AuthorSimon Mitchell

I gifted a property to my children and the seven years have now passed and so the house is outside inheritance tax (IHT). The house was sold this year and the necessary capital gains tax paid, but I am now moving and my children have lent me '600,000 towards the purchase of my new home using the sale proceeds of the gifted house.

I have been advised that if I pay HM Revenue & Customs an annual sum to show the loan is income, this should then keep the money out of my estate for IHT purposes. Do I need any further legal documentation to protect the children from potential tax on my demise or will a promissory note for '600,000 payable from my estate on my death be sufficient for HMRC together with my annual tax returns showing the loan as income?

Simon Mitchell, head of the wills, estate & tax planning division at Thomson Snell & Passmore says this is the sort of question that crops up in tax exams, as it potentially involves three sets of anti-avoidance provisions. As a result, the answer isn't simple, so it's important that you seek professional advice on your own detailed circumstances. The following is a brief guide to the provisions that may be relevant but loan documentation alone won't address the potential issues.

The first question is whether the original gift of the property to your children was a "gift with reservation of benefit" (a "Grob"). This applies if you used the property after the gift, without paying a market rent for that use.

If you lived there, continued to receive rent or spend holidays there, you would potentially need to wait seven years from the date of that benefit ceasing before the value of the property falls out of your estate for IHT purposes.

Even if there was no Grob originally, if at any time after the gift you receive a benefit from the gifted assets, the value of those assets will fall back into your estate for IHT purposes. There are "tracing" rules that can apply the Grob rules to the proceeds of sale or exchange of the...

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