A the residence nil rate band will gradually reduce, or taper away, for an estate worth more than £2 million, even if a home is left to direct descendants.
The residence nil rate band will reduce by £1 for every £2 that the estate is worth more than the £2 million taper threshold.
The value of the estate for taper purposes is the total of all the assets in the estate less any debts or liabilities. When you work out how much the estate is worth, do not take off any:
- exemptions such as spouse exemption
- reliefs such as agricultural or business property relief
Ignore assets that are specifically excluded from Inheritance Tax.
Tapering can also reduce the amount of residence nil rate band available to transfer to a surviving spouse or civil partner, even if no residence nil rate band is used when the first of the couple dies.
You calculate the amount of transferred residence nil rate band that the survivor’s estate can claim using the percentage of residence nil rate band that was not used when the first of the couple died.
If the estate of the first of the couple to die is worth more than £2 million, tapering will reduce the amount of the unused residence nil rate band in that estate. This in turn reduces the amount of residence nil rate band that is transferable to the surviving spouse or civil partner’s estate.find Bristol Local account and Tax consultant near me Local Accountants Bristol Accountants Patchway Accountants Filton Accountants in Clifton BS8, Accountants in Bristol Accountants in Yate Accountants Local expert advisors Accountants in Bedminster BS3 , Accountants in Brislington BS4 , Accountants in Bristol South BS14, Accountants in Horfield BS7 Accountants Bradley Stoke Accountants close to me, the tax expert near me in my area, close to me