IHTM27211 - Foreign property: Property excluded from Inheritance Tax: introduction

From 6 April 2025 the rules relating to the excluded propertyÌý(IHTM04251)Ìýstatus of foreign property (IHTM04271) changed. Ìý

"Excluded property" is a technical term. As its name implies, it covers property of certain types which is effectively outside the charge to Inheritance Tax, subject to certain conditions. The exclusion applies to property transferred during a person's lifetime (IHTA84/S3 (2) or owned at death by individuals (IHTA84/S5 (1)) and to property held in a settlement (IHTA84/S53 (1) and IHTA84/S58 (1)(f)). Excluded property is different from an exempt transfer. Only an exempt transfer is relevant for the purposes of IHTA84/S36 to S42 for grossing up, interaction and so on (IHTM11000).Ìý

Remember that you must establishÌýthe relevant facts that applied at the time when the transfer or disposition was made, unlessÌýthe legislation points you to any different time.Ìý

ExampleÌý(before 6 April 2025)Ìý

On 6 April 2000, Adrian transferred US $50,000 to his daughter. He died in 2012 domiciled in the UK.Ìý

In determiningÌýwhether the lifetime transfer was of excluded property, you should establishÌýthe locality of the cash transferred and Adrian's domicile as ofÌý6 April 2000. Anything that happened to the cash afterwards (for example, its investment in the UK) or any change in Adrian's domicile following the transfer does not normally matter.Ìý

Example (afterÌý6 April 2025)Ìý

On 15 May 2026, Giovanni transferred €75,000 from his Italian bank account to his niece. He died in 2040 as a long-term UK resident having been in the UK for 11 full tax years. Ìý

When Giovanni transferred the €75,000 to his niece, he was not a long-term UK residentÌýand the cash was transferred from an Italian situs bank and therefore was excluded property.  Ìý

Anything that happened to the cash after the transfer to Giovanni’s niece, or the change to Giovanni’s long-term UK residence status, would not have any effect. Ìý