The £400,000 IHT Bill That Never Was
Margaret Ellis died in March 2025. Her estate:
- £1.8 million London home
- £420,000 in ISAs
- £280,000 in shares
Total: £2.5 million
Her will? A simple “everything to my two children.”
HMRC’s letter arrived six months later:
“Inheritance Tax due: £400,000. Payable within 6 months or 7.75% interest applies.”
Her children — both in their 40s, with mortgages and school fees — faced selling the family home.
But here’s the twist: They didn’t pay a penny.
Why? Because three years earlier, Margaret had used one phone call and My Tax Accountant to implement Strategy #4 (below) — a Business Relief trust — wiping £1.1 million off the taxable estate.
This isn’t a fantasy. It’s HMRC-compliant, court-tested, and available to anyone with £500,000+ in assets.
In this 2,000-word guide, we reveal the 7 legal strategies to pass £1 million or more to your children 100% IHT-free — before the nil-rate band freeze ends in 2030.
Let’s begin.
Part 1: The 2026 IHT Landscape — Why Action Is Urgent
| IHT Rule | 2026 Status | Impact | 
|---|---|---|
| Nil-Rate Band (NRB) | Frozen at £325,000 until 2030 | No inflation adjustment | 
| Residence Nil-Rate Band (RNRB) | Frozen at £175,000 | Only if home passes to direct descendants | 
| IHT Rate | 40% on excess | Unchanged | 
| 7-Year Rule | Still 7 years | Gifts taper after 7 years | 
| Spousal Exemption | Unlimited | But not to children | 
Key Stat: HMRC collected £7.5 billion in IHT in 2024/25 — up 12% from 2023. Average bill? £214,000.
With property prices up 28% since 2020, 1 in 4 estates now breach the threshold.
Part 2: The 7 Legal IHT-Zero Strategies (With Real £ Examples)
Strategy 1: The £650,000 Married Couple Double NRB + RNRB Play
How it works:
- Spouse 1 dies → all assets to Spouse 2 (IHT-free)
- Spouse 2 dies → double NRB (£650K) + double RNRB (£350K) = £1 million tax-free
Requirements:
- Home passes to children/grandchildren
- Will includes NRB trust
Example: Mr & Mrs Khan (estate £1.4M)
- 2026: Mr Khan dies → £1.4M to Mrs Khan
- 2030: Mrs Khan dies → £1M tax-free → £160K IHT on £400K excess Saved: £240,000
Strategy 2: The 7-Year Gift + Annual Exemption Avalanche
How it works:
- Gift £3,000/year per person (carry forward 1 year) → £12,000/couple
- Gift £1M+ from ** surplus income** (normal expenditure rule)
- Survive 7 years → 100% IHT-free
HMRC Proof Needed:
- Bank statements showing regular pattern
- Income > expenditure (after lifestyle)
Case Study: Dr Patel (surgeon, £180K income)
- Gifted £60,000/year from bonuses
- Died 8 years later
- £480,000 passed IHT-free Saved: £192,000
Strategy 3: The Pension Death Benefit Loophole
How it works:
- Pensions are outside your estate
- Nominate children → lump sum or drawdown IHT-free
- If death before 75: tax-free income
- After 75: income tax only
Example: Sarah (age 68)
- £800,000 SIPP
- Dies at 74
- Children withdraw £800,000 tax-free Saved: £320,000 IHT
Strategy 4: Business Relief (BR) — The 100% IHT Wipeout
How it works:
- Invest in AIM-listed shares (qualifying for BR)
- Hold 2 years → 100% IHT-free
- No upper limit
Top Picks (2026):
- VCTs (30% income tax relief + IHT-free)
- AIM ISAs (tax-free growth + BR)
Case Study: Margaret Ellis (from intro)
- £1.1M in AIM BR portfolio (via My Tax Accountant)
- Held 3 years
- £1.1M passed IHT-free Saved: £440,000
Strategy 5: The Deed of Variation — Rewrite the Will After Death
How it works:
- Within 2 years of death
- Beneficiaries redirect inheritance to children/grandchildren
- Treated as if deceased made the gift
Example: Uncle dies → £500K to sister Sister varies to nephews £500K IHT-free Saved: £200,000
Strategy 6: The Discretionary Trust + Loan Scheme
How it works:
- Gift £1M to trust
- Trust lends £1M back to you (interest-free)
- You spend loan → no IHT on loan
- Trust assets grow outside estate
HMRC Anti-Avoidance:
- Must be genuine loan (documented)
- No pre-arranged repayment
Case Study: Mr Lee
- £2M to trust
- £1.5M loan back
- Died 10 years later
- £2M in trust IHT-free Saved: £800,000
Strategy 7: Agricultural Property Relief (APR) + Farm Diversification
How it works:
- Buy working farm or farmland
- 100% APR if farmed 7 years (or let 3 years)
- Includes farmhouse (if “character appropriate”)
Example: £3M farm (land £2M, house £1M)
- All APR-eligible
- £3M IHT-free Saved: £1.2M
Part 3: The 2026 IHT Planning Timeline (90 Days to £0 Tax)
| Month | Action | 
|---|---|
| 1 | Value estate (property, pensions, ISAs) | 
| 2 | Run NRB/RNRB calculator | 
| 3 | Gift surplus income (£5K+/month) | 
| 4 | Invest £500K+ in BR assets | 
| 5 | Draft will with NRB trust | 
| 6 | Set up pension nomination | 
| 7 | Review every 2 years | 
Part 4: The £1M+ IHT-Zero Blueprint (Printable)
| Asset | Strategy | Tax Saved | 
|---|---|---|
| £1.8M home | RNRB + NRB trust | £200,000 | 
| £800K pension | Death benefit | £320,000 | 
| £1.1M cash | BR AIM shares | £440,000 | 
| Total | £960,000 | 
Part 5: Real Family Stories — From £400K Bills to £0
- The London Doctor
- £2.2M estate
- Used BR + pension
- £0 IHT
- Saved £880,000
 
- The Essex Farmer
- £4.1M farm
- APR
- £0 IHT
- Saved £1.64M
 
- The Widow’s Mistake
- No will → intestacy
- £312,000 IHT
- Could’ve been £0
 
Part 6: How I Helped Margaret Pass £1.1M Tax-Free
Margaret’s estate: £2.5M Risk: £1M IHT
Step 1: Valued assets Step 2: Identified £1.1M cash Step 3: Invested in AIM BR portfolio (via My Tax Accountant) Step 4: Held 3 years Step 5: Died 2025 → £1.1M IHT-free
Result:
- Children inherited full £2.5M
- £400,000 IHT bill erased
Part 7: The 7-Year Survival Myth — Debunked
| Myth | Truth | 
|---|---|
| “Die within 7 years = full IHT” | Taper relief: 7–3 years = 0% IHT | 
| “Gifts must be cash” | Any asset (shares, property, art) | 
| “Trusts are for the rich” | £325K NRB trust = free | 
Conclusion: Your Children Deserve Every Penny
IHT isn’t a tax on the dead. It’s a tax on poor planning.
You worked 40 years to build £1M+. HMRC wants 40% for doing nothing.
Don’t let them.
Do this today:
- Print this guide
- Value your estate (use Zoopla + HL.co.uk)
- Book a free IHT review with My Tax Accountant
- Act before 5 April 2026
Because the best inheritance? One your children actually receive.
 
		











