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YouGov poll shows majority support raising IHT threshold above £325k despite ‘eyewatering’ public finance decisions ahead

8 November 2022

Inheritance tax planning remains prudent regardless of any potential rule change Kingsley Napley says.

A recent YouGov poll* commissioned by law firm Kingsley Napley LLP shows little support for the Government bolstering tax take from inheritance tax (IHT), despite the current pressure on public finances.

On 20th and 21st October 2022, YouGov surveyed 1700 adults representing a cross-section of the UK population by socio-economic class, region, age and political voting record to seek their views on potential inheritance tax rule changes, in light of Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s comments that there are difficult decisions ahead on tax and spending to rebalance the UK economy.

The poll asked to what extent those surveyed would support the Government taking the following steps:

 

SUPPORT

OPPOSE

DON’T KNOW

Increasing the current 40% IHT rate

16%

67%

16%

Raising the £325k threshold at which the estate of the deceased is required to pay inheritance tax

63%

21%

16%

Abolishing IHT completely

48%

37%

15%

James Ward, Partner and Head of Private Client at Kingsley Napley LLP, says:

IHT is regarded by some as a double taxation given people already pay income tax during their lifetime and is often described as one of the most hated taxes. Our survey results show attitudes on this are clearly not swayed by the current economic situation – a majority would oppose increasing inheritance tax rates and, further, even support the idea of raising the threshold at which IHT kicks in. If the Government is tempted to tamper with IHT rules as part of the effort to plug the public finance gap, it may need to think again.”

Interestingly, the YouGov poll data showed there is greater support for increasing IHT rates amongst younger generation voters than those aged 65+ and there is a similar trend over the threshold question, although the differential was less marked.

 

Age

SUPPORT

OPPOSE

DON’T KNOW

Increasing the current 40% IHT rate

 

18-24

25-40

50-64

65+

26%

16%

16%

13%

53%

66%

73%

71%

21%

18%

11%

15%

Raising the £325k threshold at which the estate of the deceased is required to pay inheritance tax

18-24

25-40

50-64

65+

49%

57%

68%

71%

27%

24%

19%

15%

25%

18%

12%

14%

Abolishing IHT completely

 

18-24

25-40

50-64

65+

35%

49%

53%

51%

41%

36%

57%

36%

24%

15%

10%

14%

And the breakdown of voters by political party alignment was:

 

 

CONSERV

LAB

LIB DEM

Increasing the current 40% IHT rate

Support

Oppose

10%

82%

24%

57%

21%

72%

Raising the £325k threshold at which the estate of the deceased is required to pay inheritance tax

Support

Oppose

77%

13%

59%

24%

68%

20%

Abolishing IHT completely

Support

Oppose

60%

30%

38%

47%

43%

50%

James Ward comments:

The age and voting trends here are hardly surprising. They underline that Tory voters, who are often older and wealthier, would reject their estates being subject to more IHT and if anything would prefer IHT liabilities to be reduced. The Chancellor should take note.”

James continues:

Decades of house price growth across the UK has meant more and more households have found they fall into the threshold for paying IHT because the nil-rate band has been frozen since 2009. We know the Government’s total IHT take increased from £5.2bn in the tax year 2019-20 to £6.1bn for the financial year 2021-22 as a result. Whilst some have suggested the bands should be reviewed in line with inflation, downward pressure on house prices may go some way to ease the burden on tax payers without the need for regime change. 

Whatever the future ahead for IHT, those in scope for paying it should take legal advice and ensure they have considered some form of planning,”

James adds.

Steps lawyers may recommend to reduce inheritance tax liabilities include:

  • Capital gifting: Sizeable transfers seven years before death;
  • Income gifting: eg Contributing to grandchildren’s school fees or an offspring’s mortgage;
  • Exemptions: Using all nil rate bands. Business relief in particular can lead to big savings;
  • Life insurance: Arranging for this to be paid out to family members (insurance pays the tax);
  • SKIing: Spending the Kids Inheritance.  

NOTES TO EDITORS

*All figures, unless otherwise stated, are from YouGov Plc.  Total sample size was 1,700 adults. Fieldwork was undertaken between 20th - 21st October 2022. The survey was carried out online. The figures have been weighted and are representative of all GB adults (aged 18+). The above summary figures have been rounded. The full YouGov poll data set can be viewed here.

Kingsley Napley recently unveiled its latest ‘Inheritance Tax Premier League’ showing which areas pay the most inheritance tax by local authority based on HMRC data – see details here.

 

About Kingsley Napley

Kingsley Napley LLP was Law Firm of the Year (Independents) in The Lawyer’s latest awards and is a leading UK based law firm providing expertise for our clients’ business and private lives, when it matters most. We advise in the following areas: corporate and commercial, criminal, dispute resolution, employment, family & divorce, immigration, medical negligence & personal injury, private client, public law, real estate & construction, and regulatory law.

 

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