Safeguarding your family’s lifestyle

We all want to safeguard our family’s lifestyle in case the worst should happen. But only a quarter (24%) of adults in the UK with children under 16 have any form of financial protection, a significant drop from 31% in 2013, according to the latest research from the Scottish Widows Protection Report. With over half (54%) of this group admitting that their savings would last just a couple of months if they were unable to work, a significant protection gap exists for families in the UK.

Real challenges for households
Almost half of households (46%) with children under 16 are now also reliant on two incomes, and a further 14% of this group state that parents or grandparents are dependent on their income. There would be real challenges for these households if one income were lost.

Childcare costs are another area that can be impacted by the loss of one parent’s income, equally so if grandparents could not continue to provide support. With more parents working and with increasing childcare costs, up 27% since 2009[1], 40% of those with children under 16 rely on their parents to help with free childcare.

Following the death of a parent 
While some government support is available in times of need, the current state bereavement benefits and support system is based on marriage or registered civil partnerships and doesn’t yet replicate the modern family we see today. Unmarried couples and long-term partners are left in a welfare grey area – particularly when it comes to looking after their dependent children following the death of a parent.

People are realistic about the support available, with only 1% of those with children under 16 believing the state would look after their family if something were to happen to them. 45% of this group also believe that individuals should take personal responsibility for protecting their income through insuring against the unexpected happening to themselves or a loved one.

Source:
[1] Family and Childcare Trust – Childcare Costs Survey, 2014.

One of life’s unpleasant facts

Protecting your assets to give your family lasting benefits in an uncertain world

Inheritance Tax (IHT) in the UK is a subject that was once something that only affected very wealthy people. It may be one of life’s unpleasant facts but today it affects more people than ever, partly due to the rise in the property market that has not been matched by a corresponding rise in the IHT threshold.

Taxing times
The threshold is currently just £325,000 – any assets above this level are taxed at 40%. Married couples and registered civil partners have a joint estate of £650,000 before any IHT is payable. The threshold usually rises each year but has been frozen at £325,000 for tax years up to and including 2017/18. Unmarried partners, no matter how long-standing, have no automatic rights under the IHT rules.

Your estate consists of all the assets you own including your home, jewellery, savings and investments, works of art, cars, and any other properties or land – even if they are overseas.
It’s usually payable on death. But there are certain circumstances (if you put assets into certain types of trusts, for example) when IHT becomes payable earlier. Any part of your estate that is left to your spouse or registered civil partner will be exempt from IHT. The exception is if
your spouse or registered civil partner
is domiciled outside the UK.

Nil rate threshold 
Every individual is entitled to a ‘Nil Rate Band’ (that is, every individual is entitled to leave an amount of their estate up to the value of the nil rate threshold to a non-exempt beneficiary without incurring IHT). If you are a widow or widower and your deceased spouse did not use the whole of his or her Nil Rate Band, the Nil Rate Band applicable at your death can be increased by the percentage of Nil Rate Band unused on the death of your deceased spouse, provided your executors make the necessary elections within two years of your death.

Gifting it away
You are allowed to make a number of small gifts each year without creating an IHT liability. Remember, each person has their own allowance, so the amount can be doubled if each spouse or partner uses their allowances. You can also make larger gifts, but these are known as ‘Potentially Exempt Transfers’ (PETs) and you could have to pay IHT on their value if you die within seven years of making them.

Any other gifts made during your lifetime which do not qualify as a PET will immediately be chargeable to IHT and these are called ‘Chargeable Lifetime Transfers’ (CLT).

Gift With Reservation 
If you make a gift to someone but keep an interest in it, it becomes known as a ‘Gift With Reservation’ and will remain in your estate for IHT purposes when you die. For example, if you gave your son your house, but continued to live in it without paying a market rent, it would be considered a Gift With Reservation. But if you continued to live there and paid him a market rent each month, it would become a Potentially Exempt Transfer and move out of the IHT net, provided you survived for seven years. However, your son would be liable to pay income tax on the rent he received.

Where the total amount of non-exempt gifts made within seven years of death plus the value of the element of your estate left to non-exempt beneficiaries exceeds the nil rate threshold, IHT is payable at 40% on the amount exceeding the threshold.

This reduces to 36% if the estate qualifies for a reduced rate as a result of a charity bequest. In some circumstances, IHT can also become payable on the lifetime gifts themselves – although gifts made between three and seven years before death could qualify for taper relief, which reduces the amount of IHT payable.

Exempt gifts
Some gifts you make during your lifetime are exempt from IHT. If you make a transfer to your spouse, this will always be exempt as long as they have a permanent UK home.
Your executors or legal personal representatives typically have six months from the end of the month of death to pay any IHT due. The estate can’t pay out to the beneficiaries until this is done. The exception is any property, land or certain types of shares, where the IHT can be paid in instalments. Then your beneficiaries have up to 10 years to pay the tax owing, plus interest.

Taper relief
Taper relief applies where tax, or additional tax, becomes payable on your death in respect of gifts made during your lifetime. The relief works on a sliding scale. The relief is given against the amount of tax you’d have to pay rather than the value of the gift itself. The value of the gift is set when it’s given, not at the time of death.

Write a Will
This is the first step in making effective plans. Whilst making a Will on its own does not reduce IHT, a Will makes sure your assets go to the people you choose quickly and with minimum effort. It also helps you to identify areas where you could take other action. If you die without a Will, your estate is divided out according to a pre-set formula, and you have no say over who gets what and how much tax is payable.

You need to keep your Will up-to-date. Getting married, divorced or having children are all key times to review your Will. If the changes are minor, you could add what’s called a ‘codicil’ to the original Will. This is a document which can have the effect of making small amendments to your original Will.

Trusts
Many people would like to make gifts to reduce IHT but are concerned about losing control of the money. This is where trusts can help. The rules changed in 2006 making some of them less tax effective, as a small minority will require you to pay IHT even before you have died, but if appropriate they should still be considered.

Life cover
If you don’t want to give away your assets while you’re still alive, another option is to take out life cover, which can pay out an amount equal to your estimated IHT liability on death. Make sure you write the policy in an appropriate trust, so that it pays out outside your estate.
Policies written on a joint life second death basis – paying out when both of the couple are dead – can be the most cost-efficient way of mitigating an IHT liability.

On your death
When you die, your estate has to be distributed one way or another. If you have a Will, your executors have to gain a Grant of Probate in England and Wales or Northern Ireland (a Grant of Confirmation in Scotland). If there’s no valid Will, or the named executors in the Will are unwilling or unable to carry out their duties, a Grant of Letters of Administration is needed. This is known as ‘dying intestate’.

What could happen if you don’t write a will?
The government lays down strict guidelines on how money is to be paid out if you die without making a Will. These could mean that a long-term unmarried partner ends up receiving nothing and the Crown gets all your estate.

INFORMATION IS BASED ON OUR CURRENT UNDERSTANDING OF TAXATION LEGISLATION AND REGULATIONS. ANY LEVELS AND BASES OF, AND RELIEFS FROM, TAXATION ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

THE FINANCIAL CONDUCT AUTHORITY DOES NOT REGULATE WILL WRITING, INHERITANCE TAX PLANNING OR TAXATION ADVICE.

‘Midlife crisis’

Baby boomers are some of the least prepared for retirement

A recent survey has revealed the concerning fact that 40% of baby boomers, those aged 55 to 74, have not started to save specifically for retirement yet, despite two-thirds of respondents understanding the State Pension will not be sufficient.

The BlackRock Global Investor Pulse survey found that Britain’s baby boomers are some of the least prepared for their retirement. The challenge remains to encourage short-term savers to become long-term investors.

The findings show that 59% of respondents are concerned they will not live comfortably in retirement, while 63% hold their non-pension savings in cash, causing inflation erosion. Of the participants, 81% said they did not know how to access income with their pension savings.

Pension reforms
In light of the pension reforms commencing from 6 April this year, 9% say they will invest their pension pot to generate an income, while 8% will move their pension into a cash savings account.

The survey highlighted that 28% of the respondents are undecided on what to do, while 26% plan to stay invested in their pension plan but take out cash regularly and use some of it to buy an annuity. Meanwhile 6% of participants say they will use part of their pension to clear debt or similar, while 3% plan to blow the lot on whatever they desire.

Approaching retirement
If you are about to retire or are approaching
your retirement, it’s important that you think
very carefully about how you will sustain your income through a much longer retirement than previous generations.

The research shows that many will use the flexibility and choice offered by the pension reforms to stay invested in their pension for longer, while taking regular income, and combine purchasing an annuity alongside it, potentially later in life. Meanwhile, almost one in five baby boomers may take advantage of the freedom to invest their money elsewhere, with half choosing a cash savings account.

More than half of the people surveyed said that they would be encouraged to save more if the Government provided a stable pensions system that is not changed by successive political parties.

INFORMATION IS BASED ON OUR CURRENT UNDERSTANDING OF TAXATION LEGISLATION AND REGULATIONS. ANY LEVELS AND BASES OF, AND RELIEFS FROM, TAXATION ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

A PENSION IS A LONG-TERM INVESTMENT. THE FUND VALUE MAY FLUCTUATE AND CAN GO DOWN. YOUR EVENTUAL INCOME MAY DEPEND UPON THE SIZE OF THE FUND AT RETIREMENT, FUTURE INTEREST RATES AND TAX LEGISLATION.