HM Courts & Tribunals Service (HMCTS) has recently changed the Inheritance Tax (IHT) reporting requirements for excepted estates. The amendment made under The Inheritance Tax (Delivery of Accounts) (Excepted Estates) (Amendment) Regulations 2021 applies to all deaths on or after 1 January 2022.
An estate is referred to as an ‘excepted estate’ when no Inheritance Tax is payable. To find out more about the criteria to qualify as a non-taxable and ‘excepted’ estate, visit the gov.uk website.
The changes are expected to reduce the number of submissions that require a completed IHT form to obtain a Grant of Probate in England and Wales or Confirmation in Scotland. However, as the reporting requirement for gross and net estate values has not changed, date of death values for assets and liabilities still need to be established as part of the probate application process.
If the date of death is before 1 January 2022, then the old rules still apply and an IHT form may be required. However, if the date of death is on or after 1 January 2022, then the following changes need to be considered if a Grant of Probate or Confirmation is required:
Previously, if any of the Nil Rate Band (NRB) was used from the first death, it automatically triggered an IHT400. However, because of the new changes, estates where some of the NRB was used by an earlier death can now qualify as an excepted estate if:
There are no changes to Residence Nil Rate Band (RNRB), therefore, this will need to be completed using the old reporting system and submitted on an IHT400.
Even if an IHT form does not need to be completed, a schedule of assets and liabilities will still need to be produced to provide the Probate Registry with:
Within the prescribed period, HMRC can request additional information regarding the estate from Executors or Administrators. Prior to 1 January 2022, the revenue had 30 days to contact Personal Representatives to query any of the information provided. The period in which a qualifying excepted estate is discharged from an IHT liability has been increased to 60 days.
Kings Court Trust’s Legal Services Director, Charlotte Toogood, comments:
From simplifying the reporting in terms of one less form for HMRC, time will tell if more sample checking will take place. As the probate application form has been updated for submissions, the declaration page now goes into more detail regarding the NRB and confirming values about the estate. This may lead to HMRC asking more probing questions about the information provided.
To summarise the changes, although the increased thresholds to avoid the complex reporting of the value passing to a spouse, chargeable transfers, and Trust limits are welcome adjustments, this should not be considered a major simplification of the process. As HMRC still require the gross and net values from the estate, the work to obtain these figures is still mostly required; it just does not need to be submitted on an IHT form.
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