UK Trusts as an effective tax planning tool
You may think that trusts are only useful for the most wealthiest in society but the threshold for paying inheritance tax is very low, set at £325,000 per individual, which means many more of us are now having to think about estate planning.
If everything you own, or all your assets, were valued above this threshold, your loved ones will be taxed at 40% at the time of your death, if you do nothing.
Trusts are useful if you have assets, such as properties, that you want to protect in a controlled manner. In other words, you want a say in who has access to your assets and wealth in your lifetime as well as after your death and you want to reduce your overall inheritance tax liability.
But trusts aren’t some dusty, antiqued notion. They are an effective tool to protect your assets in a controlled and tax efficient way, for example protection from divorce or they can be used as a tax efficient vehicle to pass money down to children or grandchildren, for example.
Placing assets in a trust means you remove these assets from your overall estate and thus are reducing your inheritance tax bill for your loved ones after your death.