DETACHED
PROPERTY OWNERS PAY MORE INHERITANCE TAX
(22 March 2006)
More
detached property owners are potentially liable to pay inheritance
tax (IHT) than five years ago with one in three (29%) detached property
sales in the UK above the 2006/07 IHT threshold of £285,000.
The revenue raised by the government through IHT has risen by £1.3bn
since 1996/97 from £1.6bn to £2.9bn in 2004/05. A further
rise is estimated in 2005/2006 to £3.3bn. This would represent
a more than doubling since 1996/97.
Five
years ago only 13% of detached properties were sold above the then
IHT threshold of £234,000. Halifax calculates that in London
82% of detached property sales occurred above the IHT threshold
over the past year, followed by the South East (59%) and the East
of England (37%).
The
average price of a detached property is above the inheritance tax
threshold of £285,000 in London (£563,085), the South
East (£390,353) and the East of England (£298,430).
The average price of a semi-detached property is above the inheritance
tax threshold of £285,000 in London (£334,510).
Sales
above the inheritance tax threshold accounted for at least 50% of
detached house transactions in 9 counties. All of these were in
London and the South East, apart from the City of Edinburgh.
Key
Findings of the Halifax research shows that:
- Sales
above the inheritance tax threshold accounted for at least 25%
of detached house transactions in 38 (36%) counties. 20 of these
were in Southern England. However, Scotland accounted for 6 of
the total, while 5 were in the West Midlands and four in Wales.
-
44% of semi-detached house sales in Greater London were above
the IHT threshold of £285,000 in the past year. 13% of semi-detached
transactions in the South East were above the threshold.
-
Sales above the inheritance tax threshold accounted for 25% of
Semi detached house transactions in 4 (4%) counties.
-
Halifax calculates that the 2006/07 IHT threshold of £285,000
would now be £425,000 if it had been increased in line with
house price inflation over the past 10 years. House prices have
risen by 176% in the past ten years compared to only a 85% increase
in the IHT threshold.
Tim
Crawford, Group Economist at Halifax commented: "The Inheritance
tax threshold has failed to keep pace with the growth in house prices
over the past ten years. Many more detached properties are now caught
in the inheritance tax net. We call on the government to index the
inheritance tax threshold for the increase in house prices in the
past ten years, which would bring it to £425,000 and to link
the inheritance tax threshold to house prices in the future."
BACKGROUND
ON INHERITANCE TAX
Successive
governments (of both main political parties) have increased the
IHT threshold on an ad hoc basis. Over the period 1997 to 2004,
the IHT threshold was increased broadly in line with retail price
inflation; rising by 22% against a 19% increase in the RPI and 129%
growth in house prices. In 2005, the threshold was increased by
5% to £275,000. A further 4% increase is scheduled for April
2006 to £285,000, followed by a 5% increase in April 2007,
which will bring the threshold to £300,000.
The
revenue raised by the government through IHT has risen by £1.3bn
since 1996/97 from £1.6bn to £2.9bn in 2004/05. A further
rise is estimated in 2005/2006 to £3.3bn. This would represent
a more than doubling since 1996/97. (Source: Inland Revenue.)
Around
6% of estates are estimated to pay IHT this year (35,000). The number
has more than doubled since 1996/97 (15,000). (Sources: Inland Revenue,
HMT Pre-Budget Report)
Estates
valued at under £1,000,000 accounted for 90% of all estates
paying IHT and 54% of all IHT revenue raised in 2001/02 (latest
available figures). About 40% of taxpayers, accounting for half
of IHT revenues, reside in London and the South East, according
to two special exercises carried out by the Inland Revenue. (Regional
figures are not normally available.)
The
IHT threshold has risen by 85% since 1995 from £154,000 to
£285,000 in March 2006. There was a 30% rise in April 1996
from £154,000 to £200,000. Since then the IHT threshold
has broadly risen in line with RPI.
House
prices have risen by 176% over the past 10 years. The average price
now equates to 62% of the IHT threshold compared with 40% ten years'
ago. A single flat rate of 40% was introduced for IHT in March 1987.
Prior to this date there were a number of tiered rates.
* The
house price data in this report is sourced from the Halifax House
Price Index - the UK's longest running monthly house price series
with data covering the whole country going back to January 1983.
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