Nobody enjoys sitting down to think about inheritance. There is something uncomfortable about the conversation even when everyone involved is healthy and an estate is decades away from being relevant. And so it gets postponed, usually until options have narrowed considerably and the decisions that would have made a real difference are no longer available.
Property makes everything more complicated. A family home bought for £80,000 in the mid-eighties and now worth considerably more is not just a financial asset. It is often the single largest thing in an estate, and its treatment under Inheritance Tax regularly comes as a shock to families who assumed there was little planning required.
Proper
estate property tax planning rewards early action disproportionately. Decisions made five or ten years before they are needed open routes that are simply not available when time is short.
What the Current Thresholds Actually Mean in Practice
The standard Inheritance Tax nil-rate band has been frozen at £325,000 since 2009. Over that same period, house prices have risen considerably across most of the country, meaning far more estates now breach the threshold than did when it was set. The Residence Nil-Rate Band adds a further allowance, currently up to £175,000, when a family home passes to direct descendants, but it tapers for larger estates and carries conditions that catch families off guard.
The rate above those thresholds is 40%. On a property worth £600,000 forming the bulk of an estate, the liability becomes significant very quickly.
Why Property Requires Different Thinking
Cash can be gifted relatively cleanly. Investments can be placed into structures that reduce exposure over time. Property is more complicated, partly because it is illiquid, partly because people usually live in it, and partly because its value tends to rise in ways that make the problem grow while nobody is addressing it.
There are legitimate planning routes available. Gifts of property can fall outside the estate if the donor survives seven years, but the rules around continued benefit need careful navigation. A parent who gifts a home but continues living there faces a very different tax treatment to what many families assume. HMRC has clear views on this, and they are not usually the views the family was hoping for.
Trusts can also play a role, though the rules around property held in trust and the associated periodic charges are detailed enough that professional advice is not optional but genuinely necessary.
The Landscape Is Shifting
The Inheritance Tax environment has not been static. Proposed changes to agricultural property relief, the planned inclusion of pension assets within estates from 2027, and evolving guidance on trust structures all mean that planning which made sense a few years ago may now need revisiting. Keeping pace with these changes is not something most families can reasonably be expected to manage themselves.
What Good Planning Actually Looks Like
It starts with an honest picture of the full estate: property values, other assets, existing wills, and any transfers already made. From there, a proper plan identifies the gap between where things sit now and what thresholds and reliefs are available, then maps out what can legitimately be done over what timeframe.
That might mean restructuring ownership between spouses. It might mean carefully timed lifetime gifts. It might mean reviewing whether the Residence Nil-Rate Band is accessible and under exactly what conditions. It rarely means a single action. Usually it is several things done thoughtfully over time.
The Cost of Waiting Is Real
Planning done ten years out allows for options that planning done at twelve months' notice simply cannot offer. Some reliefs require time to run, and families who start early can use that time to their advantage. Those who start late are more often left managing the consequences.
Getting this right is one of the more valuable things a specialist tax adviser can do, not because it involves complicated manoeuvres, but because it involves knowing the rules well enough to use them properly before the window closes.