Inheritance Tax Planning · West Sussex
Is your estate over the inheritance tax threshold? Get advice in West Sussex
The nil-rate band is frozen at £325,000 until 2030 while house prices rise. A specialist will calculate your West Sussex family's exposure and show you what can be done.
Chichester and the surrounding villages carry significant property wealth.
- Mitigate 40% inheritance tax
- Get ahead of the 2027 pension-into-estate change
- Gifting, trusts & allowances handled properly
Check your eligibility in West Sussex
Takes about 60 seconds · free & no obligation
Roughly, what's the total value of your estate — including property, savings and pensions?
The nil-rate band sits at £325k per person. A ballpark figure is all we need.
🔒 Private & secure. We connect you with regulated specialists covering West Sussex — we don't give regulated advice ourselves.
What's at stake
A 40% tax that quietly grows while thresholds stand still
Inheritance Tax is charged at 40% on the value of your estate above your allowances. Those allowances have been frozen for years while house prices and investments have risen, so families who never considered themselves wealthy can drift over the line. In West Sussex, where property values are well above the national average, an ordinary home plus pensions and savings can add up to an estate that may owe tens or hundreds of thousands in tax. The 6 April 2027 pension change is expected to make this materially worse for many. The good news: much of this is plannable, but planning generally works best with time on your side.
- The nil-rate band (£325,000) and residence nil-rate band (up to £175,000) are frozen until April 2030, so rising values can pull more West Sussex estates into the net each year
- From 6 April 2027, most unused pension funds and pension death benefits are expected to fall inside your estate for IHT, having usually sat outside it before
- For larger estates, the residence nil-rate band tapers away above £2,000,000, so part of your allowance can disappear without you realising
- Dying without a clear, up-to-date plan often means the tax bill is larger, and settled later, than it needed to be
What's included
Exactly what a specialist handles for you
Map your full estate and likely IHT exposure
A specialist totals your home, pensions, investments, business interests and gifts, applies your nil-rate and residence nil-rate bands, and shows you a clear figure for what your estate could owe today and after the 2027 pension change.
Build a gifting and allowance strategy
They structure use of your £3,000 annual exemption, gifts out of surplus income, and larger potentially exempt transfers under the 7-year rule, so wealth can pass down in a way that may reduce the eventual bill, with timing planned around taper relief between years three and seven.
Advise on trusts where they fit
Where appropriate, a specialist explains how trusts could ring-fence assets from divorce or creditors, provide for young or vulnerable beneficiaries, and control when and how an inheritance is received, while being clear about each trust's own tax treatment, such as the relevant property regime.
Re-plan your pensions around the 2027 change
They review how the 6 April 2027 inclusion of most unused pension funds and death benefits affects your estate and the order in which you draw income, so your retirement and your legacy are considered together rather than in isolation.
Get your wills and powers of attorney right
They coordinate with solicitors so your will reflects the plan, your residence nil-rate band is preserved, and both types of Lasting Power of Attorney are in place and registered with the Office of the Public Guardian, avoiding the costly default of intestacy.
Hand you a written plan and review rhythm
You receive a clear, plain-English plan you actually understand, plus a schedule to revisit it as thresholds, rules and your circumstances change over the years ahead.
A worked example
An illustrative West Sussex couple, both 63
The situation
Margaret and David own a West Sussex home worth around £950,000, hold roughly £600,000 in pensions and around £250,000 in ISAs and savings, giving an estate of about £1,800,000. Their two children are the intended beneficiaries. On today's allowances a married couple can pass on up to £1,000,000 between them where a main home passes to direct descendants, which on these figures could leave roughly £800,000 potentially exposed to 40% IHT, an indicative figure of around £320,000. From 6 April 2027, their largely untouched pensions are expected to count towards the estate too, which could increase the exposure further.
What a specialist could do
A specialist could explore options such as structured lifetime gifting, drawing pension income in a more tax-aware order, and the use of trusts or life cover written to meet the bill, which together may reduce the eventual tax their family pays and ease how it is settled. The right mix is entirely plan-dependent.
Illustrative figures only. Not advice, not a quote, and not a prediction of your result. Your own outcome depends on your full circumstances and the rules at the time, and would be confirmed by a regulated specialist.
Why this way
The specialist route vs. the usual way
Is this you?
You'll get the most from this if…
Fixed fees, no commission
Clear fixed fees. No commission. No pressure.
We connect you with regulated specialists who quote a clear fixed fee agreed before any work begins, so you always know the cost. There is no commission steering the advice and no obligation after your initial consultation. The first conversation is there to understand your situation and show you whether planning is worthwhile, not to sell you anything.
What's included
- A no-obligation initial consultation to understand your estate and goals
- A clear assessment of your likely IHT exposure, including the 6 April 2027 pension change
- A fixed-fee quote agreed up front, with no commission and no hidden costs
- A written, plain-English plan covering allowances, gifting, trusts and pensions where relevant
- Coordination with solicitors for wills and Lasting Powers of Attorney as needed
How it works
Three simple steps, all from home
Tell us your situation
A few private questions — about 60 seconds. No jargon, no commitment.
Matched to a West Sussex specialist
We connect you with a vetted, regulated specialist who covers West Sussex.
A free, no-obligation call
Fixed fees agreed up front. No commission, no hard sell. You decide what happens next.
Questions
Inheritance Tax Planning in West Sussex
What is actually changing with pensions in April 2027?+
From 6 April 2027, most unused pension funds and pension death benefits are expected to be included in the value of your estate for Inheritance Tax. Until now these have usually sat outside the estate, which is why pensions have often been used to pass wealth on tax-efficiently. The change is expected to pull many more families, including a good number in West Sussex, into IHT or into a higher bill, so it is worth reviewing how your pensions fit your overall plan well before the date.
How much can my family inherit before Inheritance Tax applies?+
Each person has a nil-rate band of £325,000, frozen until April 2030. On top of that, a residence nil-rate band of up to £175,000 can apply when a main home passes to direct descendants such as children or grandchildren. Because unused allowances can pass between spouses and civil partners, a couple can potentially pass on up to £1,000,000 in total. Anything above the available thresholds is generally taxed at 40%. The residence nil-rate band tapers away for estates over £2,000,000.
How does the 7-year rule on gifts work?+
Many lifetime gifts are treated as potentially exempt transfers. If you live for seven years after making the gift, it usually falls outside your estate entirely. If you die within seven years, the gift may be brought back into the calculation, though taper relief can reduce the tax on gifts made between three and seven years before death. There is also a £3,000 annual gift exemption, and gifts out of genuine surplus income can qualify too. The detail matters, which is where a specialist helps.
Could a trust help my family?+
Trusts can be useful for protecting assets from divorce or creditors, providing for young or vulnerable beneficiaries, and controlling when and how an inheritance is received. Some trusts have their own tax treatment, such as the relevant property regime, so they are not automatically the right answer for everyone. A specialist will only suggest a trust where it genuinely fits your goals and explain the cost and tax position clearly first.
Do I really need a will and a power of attorney as well?+
Yes. Dying without a will means the intestacy rules decide who inherits, which may not match your wishes and can increase the tax bill. A well-drafted will is also what lets your estate use the residence nil-rate band properly. Separately, two types of Lasting Power of Attorney, one for property and financial affairs and one for health and welfare, let people you trust act for you if you lose capacity. They must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian, so it is worth doing in good time.
Is this advice, and are the specialists regulated?+
This site itself does not give regulated financial or legal advice; it connects you with regulated specialists who do. Any figures you see here are illustrative and educational. Your actual plan and any numbers would come from a regulated specialist who has reviewed your full circumstances, and nothing here is promised as a guaranteed saving or outcome.
When is the right time to start planning?+
Generally, the earlier the better. Several of the most effective tools, particularly lifetime gifting under the 7-year rule, work best with time on your side, and the 6 April 2027 pension change adds a clear reason not to wait. Planning earlier also means decisions are made calmly rather than under pressure. If you are 50 or older with a West Sussex property and pensions, a review now is rarely wasted.
What happens at the first consultation?+
It is a no-obligation conversation to understand your estate, your family and what you want to achieve. The specialist will give you an initial sense of your likely IHT exposure and whether planning is worthwhile for you, then a clear fixed-fee quote if you choose to go further. There is no commission and no pressure to proceed.
Jargon, in plain English
- Nil-rate band (NRB)
- The £325,000 per person that can pass free of Inheritance Tax. It is frozen until April 2030.
- Residence nil-rate band (RNRB)
- An extra allowance of up to £175,000 when a main home passes to direct descendants. It tapers away for estates over £2,000,000.
- Potentially exempt transfer (PET)
- A lifetime gift that falls outside your estate if you survive seven years. Die sooner and it may be taxed, though taper relief can reduce the charge between years three and seven.
- Taper relief
- A reduction in the IHT due on a gift made between three and seven years before death. It reduces the tax on the gift, not the gift's value itself.
- Pension funds within the estate (from April 2027)
- Most unused pension funds and death benefits, which from 6 April 2027 are expected to count towards your estate for IHT rather than sitting outside it.
- Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA)
- A legal document letting someone you trust act for you if you lose capacity. There are two types, property and financial affairs, and health and welfare, both registered with the Office of the Public Guardian.
Guides & advice
Understand your options first
The inheritance tax threshold: what it is, what it isn't, and why it keeps catching people out
The nil-rate band has been frozen while house prices have risen, quietly pulling more families into inheritance tax. Here is how the thresholds actually work.
Read guide →IHTYour pension and the 2027 inheritance tax change: what's actually happening
From April 2027, most unused pension pots will fall inside your estate for inheritance tax purposes. Here is what that means for your family.
Read guide →IHTFive ways to reduce inheritance tax on your estate
Inheritance tax at 40% is one of the most predictable bills your family could face. These five approaches could reduce what they pay.
Read guide →Free · no obligation