And Yet Another Gifting Question
Discussion
A hypothetical question
Person A has a monthly pension of circa 4K and expenses of 1K
Hypothetically, that person is unlikely to survive for 7 years
Person A wants to gift on a monthly continuous basis equal amounts to siblings B & C, the sum of 1K to each of those siblings - 2K in total
How would this plan sit with HMRC, IHT and acceptable gifting?
Person A has a monthly pension of circa 4K and expenses of 1K
Hypothetically, that person is unlikely to survive for 7 years
Person A wants to gift on a monthly continuous basis equal amounts to siblings B & C, the sum of 1K to each of those siblings - 2K in total
How would this plan sit with HMRC, IHT and acceptable gifting?
A decent simple write up of the situation and guidance to ensure answer is a yes
https://www.gabyhardwicke.co.uk/briefing-notes-and...
[ spelling edit ]
https://www.gabyhardwicke.co.uk/briefing-notes-and...
[ spelling edit ]
Edited by PM3 on Sunday 22 February 12:46
Gifting regular monthly amount of unused monthly income is completely free of any tax and falls outside of IHT in all respects. The 7 year rule doesn't apply.
My IFA tells me he has a very wealthy client that's been giving £2500/month each to all 3 of his daughters for the last 25 years. When he dies, the £630K that's been received by them over the last 7 years won't count for the purposes of IHT.
But you need to keep good records to show monthly income and how you had money left over.
My IFA tells me he has a very wealthy client that's been giving £2500/month each to all 3 of his daughters for the last 25 years. When he dies, the £630K that's been received by them over the last 7 years won't count for the purposes of IHT.
But you need to keep good records to show monthly income and how you had money left over.
If its gifts out of surplus income do you even declare it on IHT403? I filled it in fairly recently and can't remember a section for such gifts, not that I was aware of any.
I think as above, you'd need to keep statements and accurate records. It would be up to the executor to prove that these gifts were exempt if HMRC decided to investigate.
I think as above, you'd need to keep statements and accurate records. It would be up to the executor to prove that these gifts were exempt if HMRC decided to investigate.
ChrisH72 said:
If its gifts out of surplus income do you even declare it on IHT403? I filled it in fairly recently and can't remember a section for such gifts, not that I was aware of any.
I think as above, you'd need to keep statements and accurate records. It would be up to the executor to prove that these gifts were exempt if HMRC decided to investigate.
See IHT403 parts 20-22. Details of income sources, expenditure details, income, surplus and regular gifting over the past seven years is required to be reported.I think as above, you'd need to keep statements and accurate records. It would be up to the executor to prove that these gifts were exempt if HMRC decided to investigate.
R.
OIC said:
If you did this with the state pension could you avoid paying 40% tax on the SP income, or reclaim the tax and gift that as well?
I'm not sure I fully understand this question.Are you asking whether or not you can give away your state pension and as a result not pay any income tax on the state pension - which is part of your overall income?
The topic of gifting is all about avoiding IHT - not income tax.
Drat and double drat.
How about slapping the SP money into a SIPP, claiming the 40% tax back and then waiting for PM Farage to reverse the RFA raid on SIPPs, which will be part of your estate for IHT from sometime soon?
Then the kids can get all of my SP tax free by killing me.
If only I'd negotiated my own personal bespoke, somehow legal (feck knows how), essentially crooked pension deal like a certain Mr Starmer.
Man of the people.
How about slapping the SP money into a SIPP, claiming the 40% tax back and then waiting for PM Farage to reverse the RFA raid on SIPPs, which will be part of your estate for IHT from sometime soon?
Then the kids can get all of my SP tax free by killing me.
If only I'd negotiated my own personal bespoke, somehow legal (feck knows how), essentially crooked pension deal like a certain Mr Starmer.
Man of the people.
OIC said:
Drat and double drat.
How about slapping the SP money into a SIPP, claiming the 40% tax back and then waiting for PM Farage to reverse the RFA raid on SIPPs, which will be part of your estate for IHT from sometime soon?
Then the kids can get all of my SP tax free by killing me.
If only I'd negotiated my own personal bespoke, somehow legal (feck knows how), essentially crooked pension deal like a certain Mr Starmer.
Man of the people.
Only if you have other non State Pension earned income that itself is greater than the amount of the State Pension.How about slapping the SP money into a SIPP, claiming the 40% tax back and then waiting for PM Farage to reverse the RFA raid on SIPPs, which will be part of your estate for IHT from sometime soon?
Then the kids can get all of my SP tax free by killing me.
If only I'd negotiated my own personal bespoke, somehow legal (feck knows how), essentially crooked pension deal like a certain Mr Starmer.
Man of the people.
Take a look at the IHT403 form for the records you'll need to keep to demonstrate that gifts are from your excess income within a tax year
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5f6...
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5f6...
RGG said:
Thanks for the replies and advice.
One question; can the monthly gifting be legitimately backdated in any way?
Regular monthly gifting out of excess income means just that, so maybe some initial backdating by a lump sum will not qualify. However, if all is in the same first tax year of gifting out of excess income, it may be OK. You need to check this out.One question; can the monthly gifting be legitimately backdated in any way?

I do regular gifting out of my excess income. I have form IHT403 all set up, so I update the information required by HMRC on a regular basis, much easier for my executors when the time comes. And they know where the form is along with all other relevant personal stuff.
R.
[quote=The Leaper
I do regular gifting out of my excess income. I have form IHT403 all set up, so I update the information required by HMRC on a regular basis, much easier for my executors when the time comes. And they know where the form is along with all other relevant personal stuff.
R.
[/quote]
Likewise whenever I have given lump sums to my 3 adult children ( in particular by using the TFC from a pension ) I have kept copies of the bank transfer/s.
As the Executor’s of our estates one day they will be grateful that I’m being so thoughtful !
I do regular gifting out of my excess income. I have form IHT403 all set up, so I update the information required by HMRC on a regular basis, much easier for my executors when the time comes. And they know where the form is along with all other relevant personal stuff.
R.
[/quote]
Likewise whenever I have given lump sums to my 3 adult children ( in particular by using the TFC from a pension ) I have kept copies of the bank transfer/s.
As the Executor’s of our estates one day they will be grateful that I’m being so thoughtful !
Coincidentally a Telegraph article on "the most valuable inheritance tax form you'll ever fill in" (IHT403, although they manage to mis-spell that)
I'm not sure whether the Apple News link only works for subscribers...
https://apple.news/AR_IqG7A4TGu5xbCbpbHk_A
If you're searching the paper's own site, the article is by Rachel Wait, published 24 February 2026 02:10pm GMT
I'm not sure whether the Apple News link only works for subscribers...
https://apple.news/AR_IqG7A4TGu5xbCbpbHk_A
If you're searching the paper's own site, the article is by Rachel Wait, published 24 February 2026 02:10pm GMT
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