IHT to be charged on unused pension pots from 2027

25 Jul 2025

The government will charge Inheritance Tax (IHT) on unused pension pots and death benefits from April 2027.

Personal representatives will be liable for reporting and paying any IHT due on unused pension funds and death benefits.

The government said that, at present, individuals can accumulate unlimited tax-free savings in their pension, draw on other means to fund their retirement and leave their unused pension assets to be inherited by beneficiaries without any IHT charge.

The measure will help reform IHT and 'deliver a fairer, less economically distortive tax treatment of inherited wealth and assets', according to the government.

Steve Webb, a former Pensions Minister, commented: 'Life is tough enough when you have just lost a loved one without having extra layers of bureaucracy on top.

'In future, the person dealing with the estate will need to track down all of the pensions held by the deceased which may have any balances in them, contact the schemes, collate all the information and put it into an online calculator and then work out and pay the IHT bill.'

Copyright

© 2025 Michael Letch & Partners LLP. All rights reserved.

We use cookies on this website, you can find more information about cookies here.
Contact Us

Please call:
01277 655 626

Quick links

Home | Contact us | Site map | Accessibility | Disclaimer | Privacy | Help |

Address
Michael Letch & Partners LLP, 146 High Street, Billericay, Essex CM12 9DF

Michael Letch & Partners LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with registration number OC328815.

Michael Letch & Partners LLP is also regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority to carry out specific activities and investment advice (registration number 112064).

The term ‘Partner’ is used to refer to a member of Michael Letch & Partners LLP. A list of members is open to inspection at our registered office at 146 High Street, Billericay, Essex, CM12 9DF.

Michael Letch & Partners LLP is registered as auditors in the United Kingdom by the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants