Government announces significant climbdown on IHT reforms
The introduction of a £1 million cap on 100% business and agricultural property relief from April 2026 has been criticised particularly heavily by the farming industry. The government has announced a significant watering down of the measure. What’s happening?
The 2024 Autumn Budget announced the end of unlimited 100% agricultural and business property relief (APR/BPR) from April 2026. The plan was to introduce a combined cap of £1m, with any qualifying assets in excess of this to benefit from 50% relief. The announcement was met with outrage from the agricultural community. Tractor protests in Central London have been ongoing periodically ever since. One of the criticisms was that the allowance would not be transferrable between spouses/civil partners if it was unused. The Autumn 2025 Budget back peddled on this and confirmed a transferrable allowance, along the same lines as the existing nil rate bands. However, less than a month later the government has announced a significantly more generous amendment: instead of a £1m allowance, each individual will be entitled to a £2.5m transferrable allowance.
Accompanying the published details was the statement from the Environment Secretary that “We have listened closely to farmers across the country and we are making changes today to protect more ordinary family farms.” This seems rather odd, as the government had 13 months from the original announcement to “listen closely” to farmers (who weren’t exactly being inconspicuous) ahead of the November Budget, and you have to wonder what new feedback became available in the four subsequent weeks. Still, perhaps it’s best not to look a (Christmas) gift horse in the mouth!
Related Topics
-
Tax relief for lending to your company
You can usually claim tax relief for money you borrow personally to lend to your company. It sounds straightforward but there are in fact a number of restrictions to trip you up. How do you secure the tax relief?
-
Who can't yet sign up for MTD IT?
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD IT) becomes mandatory from April 2026 for sole traders and landlords with qualifying income over £50,000. However, HMRC’s current guidance makes clear that not everyone can sign up yet. If you are preparing early, are you actually eligible?
-
Pay self-assessment tax