Minimising an Inheritance Tax liabilityPassing assets to beneficiaries using a trust You may decide to use a trust to pass assets to beneficiaries, particularly those who aren’t immediately able to look after their own affairs. If you do use a trust to give something away, this removes it from your estate provided you don’t use it or get any benefit from it. But bear in mind that gifts into trust may be liable to Inheritance Tax (IHT). Trusts offer a means of holding and managing money or property for people who may not be ready or able to manage it for themselves. Used in conjunction with a will, they can also help ensure that your assets are passed on in accordance with your wishes after you die. Here we take a look at the main types of UK family trust. When writing a will, there are several kinds of trust that can be used to help minimise an IHT liability. On 22 March 2006 the government changed some of the rules regarding trusts and introduced some transitional rules for trusts set up before this date. A trust might be created in various circumstances, for example: when someone is too young to handle their affairs What is a trust? Trustee Beneficiary Trust property land or buildings The main types of private UK trust Bare trust You can gift assets to a child via a bare trust while you are alive, which will be treated as a Potentially Exempt Transfer (PET) until the child reaches age 18, (the age of majority in England and Wales), when the child can legally demand his or her share of the trust fund from the trustees. All income arising within a bare trust in excess of £100 per annum will be treated as belonging to the parents (assuming that the gift was made by the parents). But providing the settlor survives seven years from the date of placing the assets in the trust, the assets can pass Inheritance Tax free to a child at age 18. Life interest or interest in possession trust In an interest in possession trust the beneficiary has a legal right to all the trust’s income (after tax and expenses), but not to the property of the trust. These trusts are typically used to leave income arising from a trust to a second surviving spouse for the rest of their life. On their death, the trust property reverts to other beneficiaries, (known as the remaindermen), who are often the children from the first marriage. You can, for example, set up an interest in possession trust in your will. You might then leave the income from the trust property to your spouse for life and the trust property itself to your children when your spouse dies. With a life interest trust, the trustees often have a ‘power of appointment,’ which means they can appoint capital to the beneficiaries (who can be from within a widely defined class, such as the settlor’s extended family) when they see fit. Transfers into interest in possession trusts after 22 March 2006 are taxable as follows: 20 per cent tax payable based on the amount gifted into the trust at the outset, which is in excess of the prevailing nil rate band There is also an exit charge on any distribution of trust assets between each ten-year anniversary. Discretionary trust Discretionary trusts are often used to gift assets to grandchildren, as the flexible nature of these trusts allows the settlor to wait and see how they turn out before making outright gifts. When any discretionary trust is wound up, an exit charge is payable of up to 6 per cent of the value of the remaining assets in the trust, subject to the reliefs for business and agricultural property. Accumulation and maintenance trust In England and Wales the beneficiaries become entitled to the trust property when they reach the age of 18. At that point the trust turns into an ‘interest in possession’ trust. The position is different in Scotland, as, once a beneficiary reaches the age of 16, they could require the trustees to hand over the trust property. Accumulation and maintenance trusts that were already established before 22 March 2006, and where the child is not entitled to access the trust property until an age up to 25, could be liable to an IHT charge of up to 4.2 per cent of the value of the trust assets. It has not been possible to create accumulation and maintenance trusts trust since 22 March 2006 for IHT purposes. Instead, they are taxed for IHT as discretionary trusts. Mixed trust Trusts for vulnerable persons Tax on income from UK trusts Taxation of property settled on trusts Trusts are very complicated, and you may have to pay IHT and/or Capital Gains Tax when putting property into the trust. If you want to create a trust you should seek professional advice. |
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