How to make gifts from your pension income

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Archived article: Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.

From 6 April 2027, pensions will be included in your estate for inheritance tax (IHT) purposes. There’s no doubt this aims to raise tax revenue, but the government clearly wants to encourage people to use their pensions in retirement, rather than leaving them untouched as a way of passing on wealth free of inheritance tax.

In this article, I’ll explain how making gifts from your pension income might help you pass wealth to the next generation and the importance of good record keeping. The article assumes you’re comfortable that you and your partner, if you have one, won’t run out of money in retirement and you’re looking at ways to reduce the potential inheritance tax bill on your estate.

Potential double whammy

The new rules could lead to some beneficiaries facing a tax ‘double whammy’. For example, a beneficiary inheriting a £100,000 fund from a pension holder who dies age 75 could face effective tax rates of up to 52% once the impact of both inheritance tax and income tax are felt, with those at higher income tax rates looking at 64% or even 67%.

 IHTFund after IHTIncome tax rateAfter income taxEffective tax rate
£100,00040%£60,00020%£48,00052%
£100,00040%£60,00040%£36,00064%
£100,00040%£60,00045%£33,00067%

Source: AJ Bell. Assumes beneficiary inherits £100,000 share of pension, where original pension holder dies after age 75. Assumes beneficiary is not spouse or civil partner and that none of the nil rate band is available. Scottish taxpayers are subject to different income tax bands and rates.

Making gifts

While you cannot directly gift your pension to another person; you can use withdrawals from your pension to fund gifts to loved ones. For people with estates facing large potential inheritance tax bills under the new rules, this could mean drawing down on pensions first, or faster than before.

The taxman refers to gifts as ‘transfers of value’. Gifts made in your lifetime must meet specific rules to be exempt from inheritance tax.

While gifts between spouses are exempt from inheritance tax, you can also gift up to £3,000 per tax year to other people without tax applying. This is known as your ‘annual exemption’. If you don’t use your annual exemption in a tax year you can carry it forward to the next one.

You can also make unlimited gifts if three strict conditions are met:

  • the gift is part of your normal expenditure;
  • it was from income;
  • it leaves you with enough income to maintain your normal standard of living.

What’s included as income?

Income might include earnings, income from pensions, plus investment income and interest from savings. It cannot include withdrawals of capital or accumulated income. Taking your full tax-free cash in one lump sum and giving it away would not meet this exemption and would fall under the ‘seven-year rule’ (see below).

We have been asked whether regular or phased payments of tax-free cash could count as income. ‘Income’ is not specifically defined in the inheritance tax legislation and HMRC says income in these cases, “isn’t necessarily the same as income for tax purposes”. While this potentially opens the door to regular payments that are part tax-free and part-taxable being eligible, HMRC assesses claims on an individual basis, and this hasn’t been well tested or challenged.

Turning on your pension income or increasing it and gifting from these extra amounts would likely meet the rules, provided you don’t need to draw from capital (e.g. ISAs or savings) to fund your retirement because of giving this income away.

Some gifts could be tax neutral

Taking extra income from a pension to fund gifts will mean you pay income tax on the withdrawals. That means there’s a chance you tip into a higher income tax bracket when the withdrawals are added to your other income, including any state pension.

If the money is used to fund pension contributions to other people, they could claim their own pension tax relief on what is paid in. They’d need to meet the rules for UK tax relief and have sufficient pension annual allowance left for the year to get the full benefit, but the tax relief they get on the contribution could offset or even exceed the amount of tax you paid on the way out.

The money you’ve gifted (before tax) is outside of your estate for inheritance tax and the recipient has more saved in their own tax-free pension wrapper for their retirement.

The seven-year rule

If none of the full exemptions apply, you can also make ‘potentially exempt’ gifts above the allowances that will usually fall out of your estate if you survive for seven years after making them. If you die after three full years but within the seven-year window, taper relief might help reduce the inheritance tax rate payable on all or part of the gift from the usual 40%, if specific conditions are met.

Good record keeping is essential

Although the official rules state that it is up to you (as the person making the gift) to prove that the gift(s) meet the conditions, in reality, it will fall upon the people administering your estate to arrange and file the paperwork after your death.

They’ll need to evidence that the gifts were made from income and that your usual spending didn’t fall because of them, so it’s crucial that you keep good records now if you are considering making use of the exemption.

The form to declare gifts made by someone who has died is IHT403, with the final page showing how gifts from normal expenditure should be declared and the level of detail required.

Getting access to bank statements can be difficult after someone has died, especially before probate is granted. As inheritance tax will usually need to be accounted and paid within six months of death, good record keeping is essential to make full use of the exemption.

These articles are for information purposes only and are not a personal recommendation or advice. Pension and tax rules apply, and may change in the future.

Charlene Young: Senior Pensions and Savings Expert

Charlene Young is AJ Bell’s Senior Pensions and Savings Expert. She joined AJ Bell in 2014 from a wealth management firm where she worked with private clients and small businesses as a financial planner.

Charlene...

Charlene Young

These articles are for information purposes only and are not a personal recommendation or advice. Tax treatment depends on your individual circumstances and rules may change. Pension rules apply.

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