What you might not know about Inheritance Tax and Whole of Life insurance
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What you might not know about Inheritance Tax and Whole of Life insurance
One of the biggest misconceptions surrounding inheritance tax planning is that people can “sort it out later”.
In reality, delaying inheritance tax planning, especially when it relies on Whole of Life cover, has a direct and measurable cost that compounds with every birthday and every change in health.
Many landlords now sit on portfolios worth several million pounds, yet still postpone meaningful IHT planning or, some might say ‘selfishly‘ leave the problem to their children to “work it out when the time comes”.
As explained previously in Why Whole of Life in trust might be the most misunderstood legacy savings plan available, the purpose of this type of planning is liquidity, certainty and control at precisely the moment a family is most vulnerable.
The timing of when you arrange cover can materially change affordability.
Take the following indicative monthly premiums for £1 million of Whole of Life cover for a single male ingood health:
| Age | Monthly premium |
|---|---|
| 55 | £1,083.31 |
| 60 | £1,328.20 |
| 65 | £1,789.18 |
| 70 | £2,364.00 |
Those figures alone tell a powerful story, because waiting from age 55 to age 70 more than doubles the monthly premium. That increase is simply the insurer recognising that the statistical likelihood of a claim has increased substantially. Postponing also risks becoming uninsuranble, or worse!
The following is indicative pricing for a healthy married couple or civil partners on a Joint Life Second Death basis for the same £1 million sum assured:
| Age | Monthly premium |
|---|---|
| 55 | £860.00 |
| 60 | £990.48 |
| 65 | £1,307.00 |
| 70 | £1,655.00 |
Joint Life Second Death policies are often more suitable for married couples and civil partners. This is because, under current UK inheritance tax rules, transfers between spouses and civil partners are generally exempt from inheritance tax.
That means when the first person dies, assets can normally pass to the surviving spouse or civil partner without triggering an immediate inheritance tax charge. The real inheritance tax problem often arises on the second death, when the combined family wealth eventually passes down to children or other beneficiaries, and that is precisely why Joint Life Second Death policies exist. Rather than paying out on the first death, the policy pays once both individuals have died. From an inheritance tax planning perspective, this can align far more closely with the point at which the tax liability actually crystallises.
The above also explains why many long-term unmarried couples are now considering civil partnerships. In many cases, the decision is not ideological or symbolic, it is commercial, practical and family focused. A civil partnership can fundamentally alter inheritance tax exposure between a couple and can also make certain legacy planning structures materially more efficient. For some families, that single legal step can preserve hundreds of thousands of pounds that might otherwise be lost unnecessarily to inheritance tax or forced property sales.
The hidden risk is not just age
The hidden risk is also health.
As discussed in The £200,000 diagnosis: why timing matters in inheritance tax planning, many people wrongly assume that insurance remains available whenever they eventually decide to apply, but that is not how underwriting works.
A diagnosis of diabetes, heart disease, cancer, high blood pressure, obesity, or even relatively common medical issues can dramatically increase premiums. In some cases, cover may become unavailable altogether.
The difference between arranging cover at 55 versus attempting to arrange it at 65 after a medical diagnosis can easily run into hundreds of thousands of pounds over the lifetime of the policy.
Why writing the policy into trust is usually critical
For many landlords, the most important part of Whole of Life planning is not actually the policy itself, it’s how the policy is owned.
If a Whole of Life policy is not written into trust, the payout normally forms part of the deceased’s estate., and that can create two significant problems.
First, the insurance proceeds themselves may become subject to inheritance tax, which partially defeats the purpose of arranging the cover in the first place.
Second, the funds may become tied up in probate at precisely the moment beneficiaries need liquidity most urgently.
That delay can create serious practical problems for families with large property portfolios because mortgage payments still need to be maintained, properties still need to be managed and inheritance tax may still become payable before the estate is fully administered.
By contrast, when a policy is correctly written into trust, the proceeds will normally sit outside the estate and can usually be paid far more quickly to trustees for the benefit of the intended beneficiaries.
That speed and accessibility can make an enormous difference.
Rather than beneficiaries becoming forced sellers under time pressure, trustees may have immediate access to liquidity that can be used to reduce debt, cover inheritance tax liabilities, stabilise cashflow or simply provide breathing space whilst longer-term decisions are made properly.
In many cases, the trust structure is just as important as the insurance policy itself.
Trust planning can also become more sophisticated for larger estates. Some families use discretionary trusts to provide flexibility across generations, whilst others combine life cover with lending structures, business succession planning or wider asset protection strategies.
The correct structure depends entirely on personal circumstances, ownership arrangements, debt levels, family dynamics and longer-term objectives.
That is another reason why inheritance tax planning should never be reduced to simply “buying an insurance policy”. The legal structure surrounding the policy is often where much of the long-term value and protection actually sits.
Special thanks for Georgiana Lacey-Scane, a whole of market, FCA regulated, Independent Financial Adviser for providing the indicative monthly premiums and general commentary above. This must not, however, be regarded as financial advise.
Why liquidity matters for landlords
For landlords, there is another important consideration: property wealth is often highly illiquid.
A family may appear wealthy on paper whilst simultaneously lacking the cash required to pay inheritance tax bills, refinance debt, or maintain portfolio continuity after death.
Beneficiaries may then face pressure to sell properties quickly, accept discounted offers, or refinance under difficult circumstances. That can be particularly damaging if the estate includes properties that would otherwise have been retained for income, succession or long-term family security.
For those reasons, many experienced landlords now view Whole of Life cover written into trust less as an insurance purchase and more as a liquidity planning tool.
The objective is often not to make beneficiaries richer, it is to stop families becoming forced sellers at exactly the wrong moment.
The above is not financial advice, nor is Whole of Life insurance written into trust a ‘silver bullet’ that solves every inheritance tax problem. It is simply one of several planning tools that Property118 consultants may discuss where business continuity, legacy planning and inheritance tax mitigation are important considerations for you and your family.
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Contact Georgianna Lacey-Scane
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Important Notice – Scope of Planning SupportWhere our recommendations touch on areas requiring regulated input, we refer clients to appropriately authorised professionals for advice and execution.
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