Q&As
In 2006, the deceased’s husband established a nil rate band trust (NRB) in his Will funded with a loan note from his wife in the amount of £285k. The only documentation for this arrangement was a loan note and the trust was not registered with the Trust Registration Service (TRS). The deceased's children wish to have the trustees appoint this to their own children. Do charges under the relevant property regime apply to the trust? Should the trustees retrospectively register the NRB trust with the TRS and report to HMRC?
Relevant property trust charges
In the case of the ten-year charge, the available nil rate band (NRB) is used as part of a formula to calculate the effective rate (ER), which in turn determines the actual rate of inheritance tax (IHT) to be applied to the particular trust. The actual rate is 30% of the ER. As the maximum ER is 20%, the maximum actual rate is 6%. See Practice Note: Relevant property trusts—the principal (ten-year) charge before 18 November 2015 [ARCHIVED] and Relevant property trusts—principal (ten-year) charge pro forma calculation.
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