Inheritance Tax Calculator · 2026/27 Tax Year

UK inheritance tax calculator

A quick estimate of the inheritance tax your estate could face, using the 2026/27 allowances - and a look at what changes from April 2027 when most pensions come into the IHT net.

Estimate your IHT liability

All figures are an estimate only. Gifts, trusts, business property relief and other reliefs can affect the final liability - independent advice is recommended before making decisions.

Value of the home you plan to leave to direct descendants (children or grandchildren).
Savings, investments (ISAs, GIA), second properties, vehicles, personal possessions. Exclude any BPR or APR-qualifying assets - enter those in the fields below.
Most pensions are currently outside your estate. From 6 April 2027, HMRC plans to bring most unused pension funds into IHT.
Outstanding mortgage, loans, credit-card debts, estimated funeral costs.
Value of qualifying business assets attracting 100% BPR (e.g. shares in unquoted trading companies, AIM shares held 2+ years, sole-trader business interests).
Value of qualifying farmland, working farmhouses or agricultural buildings attracting 100% APR.
Lifetime gifts in last 7 years (£)

Enter the net taxable amount of each gift in the appropriate band, after the £3,000 annual exemption (plus any unused allowance from the prior tax year). Gifts more than 7 years before death are outside the estate.

Estimated inheritance tax

£0

This calculator is for illustration only. It does not account for business property relief, agricultural property relief, trust arrangements, downsizing addition, gifts with reservation of benefit, or quick succession relief. It assumes 100% of the first spouse's nil-rate band and residence nil-rate band were unused. For tailored inheritance tax advice in Southport, Birkdale, Formby, Ainsdale or the wider Merseyside and West Lancashire area, book a free 20-minute call.

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How UK inheritance tax works

The allowances in plain English

Nil-rate band: £325,000

Every individual has a £325,000 IHT allowance. Anything above this is potentially taxable at 40%. Unused nil-rate band transfers to a surviving spouse or civil partner, giving a combined allowance of up to £650,000.

Residence nil-rate band (RNRB): up to £175,000

An additional allowance applies where you leave a qualifying residence to direct descendants. Combined with the transferable RNRB, a married couple can potentially pass up to £1 million free of IHT. The RNRB tapers away once an estate exceeds £2 million.

Pensions & April 2027

Most pension pots currently sit outside the IHT estate. HMRC intends to bring most unused pension funds and death benefits into the estate from 6 April 2027. If you have substantial pension wealth, this is a material change. See Pension IHT 2027 for detail.

Gifts & the seven-year rule

Gifts more than seven years before death generally fall outside the estate. Gifts within three years attract the full 40% rate; between three and seven years, taper relief can reduce the tax due. An annual exemption of £3,000, small-gift exemptions and gifts out of surplus income are also available.

Charity rate

Leaving at least 10% of the net estate to charity reduces the IHT rate on the remainder from 40% to 36%.

Talk it through with an independent adviser

A calculator gets you an estimate - a conversation gets you a plan. The first 20 minutes is free.

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