Mar
24

The £200,000 diagnosis: why timing matters in inheritance tax planning

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The £200,000 diagnosis: why timing matters in inheritance tax planning

Most landlords spend decades building portfolios designed to deliver two things: financial security during retirement and a meaningful legacy for their families. The focus tends to be on acquisitions, refinancing and tax efficiency while the portfolio is growing. The inheritance tax question often sits quietly in the background, acknowledged but rarely urgent, yet inheritance tax has a feature that many people overlook …

The bill arrives before probate is completed.

That simple timing issue can create a serious liquidity problem for families whose wealth is tied up in property rather than cash. One recent example illustrates the point perfectly.

When a simple plan solves a complex problem

A common approach used by families with property wealth is Whole of Life insurance written in trust. The principle is straightforward. A policy is arranged that broadly mirrors the expected inheritance tax liability. When the policyholder dies, the insurance proceeds are paid into trust and can be used to settle the tax bill. The estate itself can then pass to beneficiaries without needing to sell assets quickly or borrow against them. For property investors, this can be particularly attractive because their estates are often asset-rich but cash-poor.

A typical scenario might involve a couple in their early fifties with an expected inheritance tax exposure of around £1 million. In that situation, they might normally expect to obtain Whole of Life cover for roughly £770 per month.

Put into perspective, the policy would only become poor value if both individuals lived to an extraordinarily advanced age. For most families, the cover provides certainty that the tax liability will be met.

The moment everything changes

Now consider what happens if the couple delay the decision. Suppose that, shortly before applying for the policy, one partner receives a diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes.

Assume the best-case medical scenario; no complications, no secondary conditions, and the condition is well controlled. Even so, insurers typically reassess risk.

In a case like this, the premium could reasonably increase by around 25%. Instead of paying £770 per month, the premium might rise to approximately £960 per month for the same £1 million of cover.

Faced with that increase, many couples choose the alternative option offered by insurers. Keep the original premium but reduce the cover. In this scenario the policy might drop from £1 million to around £800,000.

A £200,000 gap

On paper, that decision appears modest, in reality it can create a serious problem.

Reducing the policy by £200,000 leaves £200,000 of inheritance tax without a clear funding source.

When the estate eventually falls due for probate, HMRC will still expect the full tax bill to be paid promptly.

The family may then need to find ways to fund that shortfall. Options often include:

  • emergency borrowing
  • bridging finance
  • selling property under time pressure

Each of these carries costs. Interest can accumulate quickly if bridging finance is required while probate is progressing. Forced sales rarely achieve the best price. A problem that began as a £200,000 gap can easily become more expensive.

The key point most people miss

There is an important twist in this example; if the insurance had been arranged before any diagnosis or investigation, the later diabetes diagnosis would typically have no effect on the existing policy.

The premium would remain the same. The cover would remain intact. The difference between the two outcomes is not the medical condition itself; it is simply timing.

Why this matters particularly for landlords

Property investors frequently accumulate significant wealth over time; a portfolio that began with a handful of buy-to-let properties may grow into an estate worth several million pounds. At the same time, most of that wealth remains tied up in property. Rental income may be comfortable, yet liquidity can still be limited. When inheritance tax becomes due, families may struggle to raise large sums quickly without selling assets.

Whole of Life insurance written in trust is often used precisely to address that problem. It provides liquidity at the moment it is needed most.

The difficulty is that the availability and pricing of that cover can change unexpectedly as health circumstances evolve.

The broader lesson

Inheritance tax planning is often discussed in terms of allowances, trusts and gifting strategies. Those are all important, yet there is another dimension that receives far less attention: the timing of decisions.

Health conditions, even manageable ones, can change insurance terms permanently. Waiting a few years to review planning arrangements can alter the economics dramatically.

For families whose wealth is tied up in property portfolios, that timing risk is easy to underestimate.

Planning before the moment arrives

No one can predict when a diagnosis might occur. What families can control is when they start thinking about the consequences.

For many landlords, the moment they begin to take inheritance tax planning seriously is the same moment they realise how much of their wealth sits inside illiquid assets. By then the portfolio may already be worth several million pounds. At that stage, the difference between acting today and delaying for a few more years can turn out to be far more significant than expected. Sometimes the difference is simply a higher premium.

Sometimes it is a £200,000 gap that a family must somehow bridge at the worst possible moment.

Get A Quote

This article was submitted by Alice Ward-Smith, a whole of market, FCA regulated, Independent Financial Adviser.

To arrange a free consultation with Alice, please complete and submit the form below.

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