10 ways to transfer wealth
If you want to give your nearest and dearest a helping hand, here are ten tax-efficient ways to do so.
With a little discipline, and a few pounds to set aside each month, it's possible to amass an impressively large lump sum via regular saving or investing.
What's more, young adults face an increasingly expensive financial future, thanks to big hikes in the cost of houses, university education and marriage. Hence, regular saving is a particularly good idea if you wish to create a nest egg to be handed over to children, grandchildren or other youngsters when they reach adulthood.
However, as always, the taxman is lurking in the wings, waiting to pounce on innocent individuals who don't know how to play by his rules! So, if you'd like to maximise the capital that you put aside for relatives, read the following ten tips:
1. Children have tax allowances, too
We all know that adults have an annual tax-free allowance, but children can also take advantage of this tax break. In the 2010/11 tax year, a child can earn up to £6,475 without paying tax on this income. Sadly, income from capital given by a parent doesn't fall into this category. In addition, children also enjoy the usual Capital Gains Tax allowance, which is £10,100 this tax year.
2. Children can have pensions, too
An adult can contribute to a stakeholder pension or self-invested personal pension (SIPP) on behalf of a child. What's more, contributions of up to £2,880 per tax year attract basic-rate tax relief, which turns 80p into a pound. Thus, net payments of £240 per month add up to a gross contribution of £3,600 per year, thanks to £720 of tax relief. Result!
3. Trust in a Trust
My son is an investor in a low-cost stock-market fund known as an index tracker. Thanks to an instrument known as a bare trust, his mother retains control over this investment, but any capital gains he makes are treated as his own. Bare trusts are especially useful for grandparents, because any tax on income earned is calculated at the child's rate, yet the investment is controlled by adults. However, the child takes total control of the trust on his/her eighteenth birthday, so beware! You can learn more about trusts here.
Find out how to cut your tax bill without the effort of complex tax planning.
4. Make small gifts
Each tax year, individuals may make gifts of up to £250 to any number of people, all of which will escape inheritance tax (IHT). For example, two grandparents giving each of their six grandchildren £250 a year (an annual total of £3,000) over twenty years could reduce their combined estates by £60,000 and reduced their combined IHT bill by up to £24,000.
5. Use your annual exemption for gifts
Each tax year, an individual can give up to £3,000 to an individual or trust of their choice. Any unused exemption from the previous tax year can be carried forward to the current tax year, but no further. Over two decades, a husband and wife could together gift up to £126,000 out of their combined estates, creating a potential IHT saving of £50,400.
6. Make regular gifts out of income
If your income comfortably exceeds your outgoings and usual needs, then you can make regular cash gifts to anyone of your choice. The donor must show that the gifts are habitual, are made from after-tax income, and leave enough income to maintain his/her usual standard of living. Although this loophole can provide significant IHT savings, it is an under-used option, particularly among high earners.
7. Get a PET
Potentially Exempt Transfers (PETs) are great for both donor and recipient. If you survive for seven years after making a gift to an individual, the value of the gift falls outside your estate when IHT is calculated, provided that you don't retain a direct or indirect benefit in the assets being gifted. There is no limit to the value of a PET, so a substantial sum (even the majority of a person's assets) could be passed down in this way. Even surviving the gift by three years provides tapered relief from IHT, which will reduce your tax bill on death.
Recent question on this topic
- shelliwood asks:
My nan has 15,000 savings and would like to give it to my mum, brother and myself now rather than after she dies. Would we have to pay tax on it?
-
SoftwareBear answered "no the money has already been taxed so can be passed on without others incurring tax. not sure..."
-
ashclarke answered "I was going to say: "As far as I'm aware, the maximum monetary gift to any one person in a tax year..."
- Read more answers
-
8. Present a wedding gift
Wedding gifts can be tax-efficient as well as generous! Each parent can gift £5,000 to a child on the occasion of his/her marriage (known as a 'gift in consideration of marriage') and avoid IHT on this sum. To avoid IHT in this way, grandparents or more distant relatives can gift £2,500; for anyone else, the limit is £1,000.
9. Pass wealth to your spouse
Married couples and civil partners can take advantage of IHT-exempt transfers between spouses, whether made during their lifetime or on death. If one spouse has greater assets than the other, s/he can transfer assets to the value of the IHT nil-rate limit (currently £325,000) in order to minimise the amount of IHT payable on the death of the surviving spouse.
Indeed, tax-efficient Wills costing just a few hundred pounds can reduce an estate's IHT liability significantly.
10. Take aim at AIM
Investments in many Alternative Investment Market (AIM) shares are exempt from IHT after being held for two years. Hence, you could create a portfolio of AIM shares to pass onto relatives via your Will (or into trusts).
However, not all AIM shares qualify for this exemption - companies, for example, that themselves trade in shares wouldn't qualify - so you need to be careful. What's more, if the nature of a company's business changes, a share that previously qualified for the exemption may change its status.
AIM shares can also be volatile and illiquid (difficult to buy and sell in large numbers.) Given these issues, you should take expert advice from a specialist investment manager before proceeding.
That's it from me. Here's to more wealth and less tax!
More: Fight back against the child benefit cuts | Avoid the latest tax swindle
Comments
Be the first to comment
Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature