Inheritance Tax Explained (2026): Thresholds, Gifts & How to Reduce It

Inheritance Tax (IHT) is a 40% tax on the part of your estate above your tax-free threshold. Most estates pay nothing — but with frozen thresholds and rising house prices, more families are being caught. Here’s how it works in 2026.

£325,000Nil-rate band (tax-free)
£500,000With home left to children
£1mPossible for couples
40%Rate above the threshold

The thresholds

  • Nil-rate band: the first £325,000 of your estate is tax-free.
  • Residence nil-rate band: an extra £175,000 if you leave your home to children or grandchildren — lifting the threshold to £500,000.
  • Couples: any unused threshold passes to a spouse or civil partner, so couples can pass on up to £1 million tax-free.
  • Anything left to a spouse, civil partner or charity is exempt.

How the tax is worked out

IHT is charged at 40% on the value above your threshold. For example, an estate of £500,000 with a £325,000 threshold would be taxed on £175,000 — a bill of £70,000. Leave 10% or more to charity and the rate on the rest drops to 36%.

Gifts and the 7-year rule

Gifts you make while alive can fall outside your estate if you live for 7 years afterwards. Die within 7 years and the gift may be taxed, though taper relief can reduce the rate. There are also annual exemptions — you can give away up to £3,000 a year, plus small gifts of up to £250 per person, free of IHT.

Common ways to reduce a bill

  • Use the residence nil-rate band by leaving your home to direct descendants.
  • Make use of annual gift exemptions and regular gifts from surplus income.
  • Leave a charitable legacy to cut the rate to 36%.
  • Consider life insurance written in trust, or specialist trusts — with advice.
Estate planning often overlaps with making a will and equity release. Take regulated advice for anything complex.
Not tax or financial advice. General information based on GOV.UK guidance (England & Wales/UK rules, 2026); thresholds are frozen but rules can change. Inheritance Tax is complex — consult a solicitor, accountant or FCA-authorised adviser. Last reviewed June 2026.