# UK Inheritance Tax in 2026: What the Changes Mean for Your Estate

> From frozen thresholds to the landmark overhaul of pension rules, the inheritance tax landscape has shifted considerably. Here is what every UK homeowner and saver needs to understand before it is too late.

*Section: Personal Finance — By Sarah Henderson — Published November 20, 2025 — 6 min read*

Canonical URL: https://dailyjunction.org/business-finance/inheritance-tax-uk-changes-2026
Tags: inheritance tax, estate planning, UK finance, budget 2024, pensions, property, HMRC, wealth

## Key takeaways

- The nil-rate band remains frozen at £325,000 until at least 2030, dragging more estates into the 40% tax bracket as property values rise.
- From April 2027, unused pension pots will form part of a deceased person's taxable estate — a seismic change that demands urgent planning for those with substantial defined-contribution savings.
- Agricultural and business property reliefs are being capped at £1 million from April 2026, ending the unlimited exemption that many family farms and private companies relied upon.

For decades, inheritance tax was dismissed as a problem only for the wealthy. That comfortable assumption is rapidly unravelling. With nil-rate bands frozen until at least 2030, house prices still elevated across much of Britain, and sweeping reforms to both pension and agricultural reliefs now confirmed in law, a tax that once caught fewer than one in twenty estates now threatens to reach significantly further into middle-class family wealth. If you have a home, a defined-contribution pension, or a share in a family business, the inheritance tax changes taking effect in 2025 and 2026 almost certainly affect your plans.

## The Frozen Threshold Trap

The standard inheritance tax nil-rate band — the amount you can leave before HMRC takes 40 pence in every pound — has sat at £325,000 since 2009. The government confirmed in the Autumn Budget 2024 that this freeze will continue until at least 2030. In cash terms that threshold has barely shifted for more than two decades. In real terms, after inflation, it has collapsed.

The residence nil-rate band, introduced in 2017 to help families pass on the family home, adds up to £175,000 per person where a main residence is left to direct descendants. A married couple can combine both allowances, providing a theoretical ceiling of £1 million before tax applies. But that ceiling tapers away sharply for estates worth more than £2 million, falling by £1 for every £2 above that figure. Couples with property wealth and significant savings increasingly find themselves sitting uncomfortably close to the threshold — or already above it.

HMRC's own receipts figures tell the story clearly. Inheritance tax collected in the 2024-25 tax year hit a record high, and the Office for Budget Responsibility projects continued growth in receipts as house price appreciation, frozen thresholds, and an ageing population combine to push more families into the net. The tax is no longer a niche concern for landed gentry; it is edging towards a mainstream household issue.

## Pensions: The Most Significant Change in a Generation

The most consequential reform announced in the October 2024 Budget — and the one generating the greatest alarm among financial planners — concerns pensions. From April 2027, unused funds held in defined-contribution pension schemes will be brought within the scope of inheritance tax for the first time.

Until now, pensions enjoyed a privileged position outside the taxable estate. Savers could accumulate substantial pension pots, spend their other assets, and pass the pension on to beneficiaries largely free of inheritance tax. Pension drawdown had become an almost standard estate-planning tool recommended to anyone with material savings. That era is ending.

Under the new rules, a pension pot left unspent at death will form part of the deceased's estate and be subject to the standard 40 per cent charge on amounts above the available nil-rate bands. Worse, where the beneficiary then draws income from the inherited pension, income tax will also apply — creating the prospect of a combined effective tax rate exceeding 60 per cent on inherited pension wealth for higher-rate taxpayers. It is, by some margin, the most significant structural change to pension inheritance in living memory.

Anyone who shaped their financial strategy around pension preservation needs to revisit those plans urgently. Expression-of-wish forms, trust arrangements, whole-of-life policies, and the sequencing of asset drawdown all require fresh consideration. Comparing available products and their terms across the market is an important first step; independent services such as [QuidCompare](https://quidcompare.co.uk) allow consumers to weigh financial products side by side before committing to any adviser or provider.

## Agricultural and Business Property Relief: Farmers and Entrepreneurs on the Frontline

Agricultural property relief and business property relief have long offered unlimited exemption from inheritance tax for qualifying farmland and trading business assets. For family farms and private companies, this protection was not a loophole but a structural necessity — without it, death of the principal owner could force a sale of the very assets the business depends upon.

From April 2026, both reliefs are being capped. Combined agricultural and business property relief will be limited to £1 million per individual, with assets above that level qualifying for relief at only 50 per cent — effectively attracting a 20 per cent tax rate rather than the standard 40 per cent, but still a dramatic reversal from the previous position of full exemption.

The National Farmers Union and numerous agricultural bodies mounted sustained opposition to the change following its announcement, pointing to land valuations that can place even a modest working farm well in excess of £1 million. The government maintained that the vast majority of estates would remain unaffected, a claim that many rural solicitors and accountants have contested vigorously. Whatever one's view of the policy merits, the practical implication is clear: farming families and business owners who have not yet reviewed their succession planning are running out of time.

## What You Can Do Now

The changes are substantial but they are not without solutions. Estate planning, done properly and reviewed regularly, remains effective. Several strategies are worth examining with a qualified adviser:

**Gifting.** Assets given away more than seven years before death fall outside the estate entirely under the potentially exempt transfer rules. Gifts made in the final seven years are tapered. Using the annual £3,000 gift exemption each year, along with gifts out of normal surplus income (which are immediately exempt and unlimited in value), can meaningfully reduce exposure over time.

**Trusts.** Placing assets into a suitable trust can remove them from the taxable estate, though the rules are complex and professional advice is non-negotiable. Discretionary trusts, loan trusts, and discounted gift trusts each serve different objectives.

**Life insurance.** A whole-of-life policy written in trust does not reduce the inheritance tax bill but ensures that liquid funds are available to meet it without forcing beneficiaries to sell property or business assets.

**Pension sequencing.** With pensions now inside the estate from 2027, the case for drawing on pension savings during retirement — rather than spending non-pension assets and leaving the pension intact — has strengthened considerably for many people. Your drawdown strategy may need rethinking.

**Business and agricultural planning.** Owners of farms and trading businesses should model the impact of the capped reliefs on their specific asset values and consider partnership structures, lifetime transfers, or business restructuring well before any transfer of ownership.

The common thread running through all of this advice is urgency. The April 2026 and April 2027 deadlines are not distant abstractions. They are around the corner, and the more complex an estate, the longer effective planning takes to implement. Britain's inheritance tax is changing in ways that will affect far more families than the government's headline figures suggest. The moment to act is now.

## Frequently asked questions

### What is the current inheritance tax threshold in the UK?

The standard nil-rate band is £325,000 per person and has been frozen at that level since 2009. Married couples and civil partners can combine their allowances, potentially shielding up to £650,000. If a main residence is passed to direct descendants, an additional residence nil-rate band of up to £175,000 per person may also apply, bringing the combined couple's threshold to £1 million in eligible cases.

### Will my pension be subject to inheritance tax after April 2027?

Under rules announced in the Autumn Budget 2024, most unused defined-contribution pension funds will be brought within the scope of inheritance tax from April 2027. Beneficiaries may also face income tax on withdrawals, creating a potential double tax charge. It is strongly advisable to review any expression-of-wish forms and speak to a financial adviser before the rules take effect.

### Are there legitimate ways to reduce an inheritance tax bill?

Yes. Options include making regular gifts out of surplus income (which fall outside the estate immediately), using the annual £3,000 gift exemption, placing assets into trust, taking out a whole-of-life insurance policy written in trust to cover the liability, and maximising use of the residence nil-rate band. Given the complexity of the new rules, professional advice from a regulated financial planner or solicitor is essential.

## Sources

- [Inheritance Tax: thresholds, rates and who pays — GOV.UK](https://www.gov.uk/inheritance-tax)
- [Autumn Budget 2024: changes to inheritance tax — HMRC policy paper](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/autumn-budget-2024-changes-to-inheritance-tax/autumn-budget-2024-changes-to-inheritance-tax)
- [Inheritance tax receipts hit record high — Office for Budget Responsibility](https://obr.uk/topics/tax/inheritance-tax/)
- [Agricultural property relief reform — NFU response](https://www.nfuonline.com/updates-and-information/inheritance-tax-changes/)
- [Pension inheritance tax changes explained — Money Saving Expert](https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savings/inheritance-tax/)

---
Daily Junction — https://dailyjunction.org/business-finance/inheritance-tax-uk-changes-2026
