Money & Budgeting

Money Guide for Inheriting Money UK — After Receiving Inheritance

Financial guide for inheriting money UK. Managing inheritance, tax implications, investing lump sums, emotional decisions, and planning after bereavement.

Inheriting money is emotional and financial. Often arriving during bereavement, decisions feel overwhelming. Here’s a calm guide to managing inheritance.

First Steps

Don’t Rush

Rule Take Time
Recommended 6-12 months before major decisions
Why Grief affects judgment
Immediate Park safely

Initial Actions

Action Timeline
Park in savings Immediately
Understand source What was inherited?
Debts to pay If applicable
No big decisions For months

Understanding What You’ve Inherited

Types of Inheritance

Asset What to Know
Cash Straightforward
Property May need selling or managing
Investments May transfer or sell
Pension Death benefit rules
Personal items Sentimental value

Tax Position

Tax When
IHT Already paid by estate
Income Tax on inheritance None
Future income Taxable
Future gains CGT may apply

Inherited ISA

Additional Allowance

If From Spouse APS
Additional Permitted Subscription Equal to deceased’s ISA
Timeframe 3 years to use
Benefit Extra ISA space

From Non-Spouse

Inheritance Tax Position
ISA loses wrapper On death
Inheritor receives Cash/assets
Reinvest in your ISA £20,000/year limit

Inherited Pension

From Spouse

Option Tax
Keep in pension May transfer
Lump sum (died before 75) Tax-free
Lump sum (died after 75) Income Tax
Drawdown Income Tax rate

From Parent/Other

Rules Depend on
Age at death Key factor
Type of pension DB or DC
Consult provider Specific rules

Inherited Property

Options

Path Consideration
Sell Clean, cash in hand
Keep and let Rental income
Move in If suitable

If Selling

Factor Note
CGT On gain from inherited value
Base cost Value at death
If quick sale Little gain

If Keeping

Responsibility Ongoing
Maintenance Your cost
Insurance Required
Letting Landlord duties
Mortgage? May need to pay off

What to Do With Cash Inheritance

Priority Order

Step Action
1 Park in savings account
2 Clear expensive debt (cards, loans)
3 Build/top up emergency fund
4 Max ISA (£20,000/year)
5 Invest remainder thoughtfully

By Amount

Amount Approach
Under £20,000 ISA immediately
£20,000-50,000 ISA + savings, pay debt
£50,000-200,000 Multiple years ISA, consider mortgage
Over £200,000 Financial advice recommended

Investment Approach

Lump Sum vs Drip Feed

Method When
Lump sum Statistically better returns
Drip feed Less stressful psychologically
Compromise 50% now, 50% over 6 months

Asset Allocation

If Long-Term Approach
Global equities 60-80%
Bonds 20-40%
Match Your risk tolerance

Using Funds

Option Consideration
Established funds Low-cost index funds
Platform Choose reputable
Diversification Global exposure

Debt Payoff Decision

Usually Pay Off

Debt Type Priority
Credit cards Yes, high interest
Personal loans Usually yes
Car finance Probably
Student loan Check interest rate

Mortgage Decision

Factor Consideration
Interest rate Key factor
Years left How many?
Peace of mind Value?
Tax efficiency Investing may grow more

If Mortgage Rate Low

Consideration Thought
Investing may beat Mortgage rate
But No guarantee
Emotional Mortgage-free valuable

Gifting

If You Want to Share

To IHT Free
Children/family £3,000/year (more, 7-year rule)
To charity Unlimited

Potential Pitfalls

Risk Caution
Give away too much Leave yourself short
Loans to family May not return
Pressure from others Set boundaries

Getting Advice

When Professional Help

If Consider
Large inheritance Over £100,000
Complex assets Property, business
Uncertain What to do
Tax questions Specific situation

Finding Advisor

Type For
IFA (fee-based) Investment advice
Solicitor Property/estate
Accountant Tax matters

Emotional Considerations

Common Feelings

Feeling Normal
Guilt Yes
Overwhelm Yes
Pressure to “invest wisely” Yes
Grief Takes time

Honoring the Person

Some People Choose To
Memorial Something meaningful
Charity donation In their name
Purpose Use as they’d want

Common Mistakes

Mistake Better
Rushing decisions Wait 6-12 months
Telling everyone Keep private
Guilt spending Plan calmly
Not claiming allowances ISA, pensions
Ignoring tax Understand implications
No professional advice (if large) Get help

The Inheritance Checklist

Action Status
Parked safely
Understand assets
Tax implications clear
Debts prioritized
ISA allowance used
Investment plan (if applicable)
Professional advice (if needed)
Time taken

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Sources

  1. Gov.UK — Inheritance Tax
  2. MoneyHelper