Tax

Gifting Property to Children UK 2026 — Tax Rules and How to Transfer

How to gift property to your children in the UK. Covers inheritance tax, capital gains tax, stamp duty, gift with reservation rules, and legal transfer process.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

Gifting property to children is one of the most complex areas of UK tax. Get it wrong and you could face unexpected tax bills or fail to achieve your goals. Here’s what you need to know.

Tax Overview When Gifting Property

Three Taxes to Consider

Tax When It Applies Rate
Inheritance Tax (IHT) If you die within 7 years 40% above nil-rate band
Capital Gains Tax (CGT) On any gain since purchase (non-main home) 18-24%
Stamp Duty (SDLT) If child takes on mortgage Standard rates

The 7-Year Rule

Gifting property is a “potentially exempt transfer” — if you survive 7 years, it’s outside your estate. If you die sooner:

Death After Gift IHT Rate Payable
0-3 years 40%
3-4 years 32%
4-5 years 24%
5-6 years 16%
6-7 years 8%
7+ years 0% (fully exempt)

Gift with Reservation of Benefit

This is the critical rule that catches most people.

What Counts as Reservation of Benefit

Situation Gift with Reservation? Consequence
Transfer property, continue living there rent-free Yes Property stays in estate
Transfer property, pay full market rent No Gift takes effect
Transfer property, move out completely No Gift takes effect
Keep a room for occasional visits Usually yes Depends on frequency
Child charges below-market rent Yes Property stays in estate
Help with maintenance/bills Possibly Depends on extent

How to Avoid Gift with Reservation

Option 1: Move out

  • Fully vacate the property
  • Don’t keep any possessions there
  • Don’t treat it as your home

Option 2: Pay market rent

  • Get independent valuation of rental value
  • Pay full market rent monthly
  • Child declares rental income and pays tax
  • Keep records of all payments

Option 3: Share arrangement proportionally

  • Gift part of property, keep part
  • Pay rent only on the part you gifted
  • Complex — needs professional advice

What If You’re Caught by GWROB?

If gift with reservation applies:

  • Property included in your estate at death
  • Full IHT payable on market value at death
  • No 7-year rule benefit
  • Could trigger double taxation in some cases

Capital Gains Tax on Gifted Property

When CGT Applies

Property Type CGT on Gift?
Your main home No — Principal Private Residence Relief
Second home Yes
Buy-to-let Yes
Holiday home Yes
Inherited property (not your main home) Yes

Calculating CGT on Gift

HMRC treats gifts as sales at market value.

Example: Second home gift

Item Amount
Current market value £300,000
Original purchase price £150,000
Improvements made £20,000
Gain £130,000
Annual exemption (2026/27) £3,000
Taxable gain £127,000
CGT at 18% (basic rate) £22,860
CGT at 24% (higher rate) £30,480

CGT Rates on Property 2026/27

Taxpayer Status CGT Rate
Basic rate (within £50,270) 18%
Higher/additional rate 24%

Timing the Gift

  • CGT payable by 31 January following tax year of transfer
  • Can spread gain using part-gift strategies
  • Losses from other assets can offset gains
  • Gift to spouse first (tax-free) then they gift to child

Stamp Duty on Gifted Properties

When SDLT Applies to Gifts

Situation SDLT Due?
Outright gift, no mortgage No
Child takes on existing mortgage Yes — based on mortgage amount
Gift in exchange for anything of value Yes — based on value given
Transfer between spouses No

SDLT If Child Assumes Mortgage

If you gift a property with a £200,000 outstanding mortgage:

SDLT Band Rate Tax
£0-£125,000 0% £0
£125,001-£200,000 2% £1,500
Total SDLT £1,500

For second homes/investment properties, add 5% surcharge:

SDLT Band (Additional Property) Rate Tax
£0-£125,000 5% £6,250
£125,001-£200,000 7% £5,250
Total SDLT £11,500

Inheritance Tax on Property Gifts

Available Nil-Rate Bands

Allowance Amount Who Can Use
Nil-rate band £325,000 Everyone
Residence nil-rate band £175,000 Main home passing to direct descendants
Transferred allowances +£325,000 + £175,000 If spouse died first
Maximum couple £1,000,000 Both use full allowances

Residence Nil-Rate Band Rules

To get the extra £175,000:

  • Property must have been your residence
  • Must pass to direct descendants (children, grandchildren)
  • Available even if downsized (with conditions)
  • Tapers for estates over £2 million

Important: If you gift property during life, you lose the residence nil-rate band — it only applies on death.

Example: Property Gift and IHT

Scenario IHT Consequence
Gift £400,000 house, survive 7 years No IHT
Gift £400,000 house, die 4 years later £400,000 uses nil-rate band, £75,000 at 24% = £18,000 IHT
Gift £400,000 house, continue living there Property in estate, potentially £30,000-£70,000 IHT depending on other assets
Keep house until death, leave to children Use RNRB: £500,000 exempt, £0 IHT

What You Need

Requirement Details
Solicitor/conveyancer Recommended for complex transfers
Land Registry form TR1 (transfer of whole property)
ID verification Standard identity checks
Proof of ownership Title deeds or Land Registry documents
Market valuation For tax purposes

Costs of Transfer

Item Typical Cost
Solicitor fees £500-£1,500
Land Registry fee £20-£125
Valuation fee £150-£400
Bank transfer fees £20-£50
Total (excluding tax) £700-£2,000

Timeline

  1. Agree terms — Ensure all parties understand implications (1 day)
  2. Get valuations — For CGT and IHT purposes (1-2 weeks)
  3. Instruct solicitor — Prepare transfer documents (1-2 weeks)
  4. Sign documents — TR1 and related paperwork (1 day)
  5. Submit to Land Registry — Update ownership (2-6 weeks)
  6. Complete — Total 4-10 weeks typically

Alternative Strategies

Keep Property Until Death

Pros Cons
Use residence nil-rate band IHT if estate exceeds allowances
No CGT on death (base cost resets) Property in probate
Children get property with market value base May need to sell for care fees
Keep full control No 7-year IHT planning

Joint Ownership with Children

Types of joint ownership:

Type Meaning On Death
Joint tenants Equal shares, automatic transfer Share passes to other owner(s)
Tenants in common Defined shares, separate ownership Share passes via will

Joint tenancy:

  • Your share automatically passes to child
  • No probate needed for that share
  • Capital gains calculated on your share only

Sell Property to Child at Market Value

Aspect Implication
CGT Full liability if not main home
IHT No IHT — not a gift
SDLT Child pays full stamp duty
Mortgage Child needs to qualify
Cash You receive sale proceeds

Use a Lifetime Mortgage/Equity Release

If you need income but want to reduce estate:

  • Release equity, gift cash to children
  • 7-year survival rule applies to cash gift
  • You keep living in property
  • Debt reduces estate value at death

Special Situations

Gifting Buy-to-Let Property

Tax Application
CGT Payable on full gain at 18/24%
IHT PET — 7-year rule
Income tax Child declares future rental income
SDLT If mortgage transferred, at higher additional property rates

Strategy: Consider selling, paying CGT, and gifting cash instead — simpler and similar outcome.

Gifting to Children Under 18

  • Cannot hold legal title to property
  • Must use bare trust (child is beneficial owner)
  • Adult trustee manages until child is 18
  • Property transfers automatically at 18

Gifting Agricultural or Business Property

May qualify for relief:

  • Agricultural Property Relief — up to 100% IHT exemption
  • Business Property Relief — up to 100% IHT exemption

Professional advice essential for these.

Tax Comparison Summary

Strategy CGT IHT SDLT Complexity
Gift now, move out Possibly PET (7-year rule) Possibly Medium
Gift now, pay rent Possibly PET effective Possibly High
Keep until death None Full estate None Low
Sell at market value Yes None Yes Medium
Joint ownership On your share On your share Possibly Medium
Trust arrangements Varies Varies Varies High

Professional Advice Needed

Always get professional advice if:

  • Property value significant (over £325,000)
  • Multiple properties involved
  • Want to continue living in property
  • Any mortgage on property
  • Blended family situations
  • Non-UK residents involved
  • Agricultural or business property
  • Already made other large gifts

Expect to pay £500-£2,000 for comprehensive advice from a qualified solicitor and tax specialist.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Inheritance Tax on gifts
  2. HMRC — Gifts with reservation of benefit
  3. GOV.UK — Capital Gains Tax on property