The government wants farmers to pay the tax on assets above £1m apiece at a reduced rate of 20 per cent. The allowance comes on top of the £500,000 a typical homeowner gets if they leave their home to their children or grandchildren, so a married couple can shelter up to £3m from HMRC, a sum which will exclude most farms.
Groups including the Liberal Democrats have suggested up to 70,000 farms could be hit, although this number assumes a limit of £1m for tax-free inheritance rather than £3m. The government claims that the biggest 500 farm estates in the UK will pay the tax per year, with smaller farms “not affected”, and independent analysis by Dan Neidle, a tax expert, suggests that as few as 100 per year will be captured.
But inheritance tax is incredibly unpopular, and farmers who have staff to consider will also have to grapple with higher employers’ national insurance bills, since Ms Reeves wants to lower the threshold at which it is paid. “They’re pretty angry,” says Sam Dewes, a wealth manager whose clients include farmers at HW Fisher.
And the maths favours married couples, which many say is unfair. Indeed, being married on the average farm makes all the difference. According to estate agent Carter Jonas, average arable land is priced at £9,667 per acre, while pasture for grazing goes for £7,833.
This story is from the November 19, 2024 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 19, 2024 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Hero's return: can Dupont win Six Nations for France?
Harry Latham-Coyle and Luke Baker consider this and other key questions in making their tournament predictions
Sinner’s biggest opponent now lies outside the court
Jannik Sinner was proud.
Why Trump’s quick fix for Ukraine war won’t work
Concessions of territory and new power alliances among the issues keeping Putin and Zelensky from entering peace talks
Reeves to loosen rules on how pension funds invest
Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves are turning to Britain’s pension funds in a desperate bid to unlock cash for investment and get the economy growing.
Our high-street stalwarts don’t deserve to survive
With the news that another veteran retailer may be shutting its doors, Helen Coffey wonders whether any of the UK’s heritage chains can cling on amid the digital shopping storm
Heseltine calls Brexit pack of lies’ and urges new vote
Michael Heseltine said Brexiteers sold Britain a pack of lies” as he called for the UK to rejoin the European Union.
Home at last... the 200,000 returning to northern Gaza for first time in 15 months
Masses of Palestinians walk north along the coastal route as those travelling in cars face days-long waits at checkpoints
Premier League’s costliest flop exits United valueless
Antony’s Manchester United career dwindled to the point the club let the 85m signing go out on loan without a fee
Lukashenko wins new term in sham’ Belarus election
Belarus’ authoritarian president Alexander Lukashenko has extended his more than three decades in power after an orchestrated election that the opposition and the European Union rejected as a sham.
Police end river search for missing Aberdeen sisters
Detectives looking for two missing sisters have ended the search of a river and harbour in Aberdeen three weeks after the pair mysteriously vanished.