Tax

Gifts from Income Exemption Explained UK 2026 — The Unlimited IHT Exemption

How to use the gifts from income exemption for inheritance tax in the UK. Qualify unlimited gifts as exempt from IHT if made from surplus income. Rules, examples, and record-keeping.

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.

The gifts from income exemption is the most powerful — and most underused — inheritance tax planning tool. There’s no limit on how much you can give, as long as it comes from surplus income.

What Is the Gifts from Income Exemption?

Key Features

Feature Detail
Formal name Normal expenditure out of income exemption
Legal basis IHTA 1984 s.21
Amount limit No limit
Waiting period None — immediately exempt
Who can use Anyone with surplus income
When to claim After death, via IHT403 form

Why It’s So Powerful

Unlike other exemptions:

  • No annual cap (£3,000 annual exemption is capped)
  • No 7-year survival requirement
  • Can give any amount that qualifies
  • Immediately outside estate
  • Works alongside other exemptions

The Three Requirements

For a gift to qualify, it must meet all three conditions:

1. Made from Income (Not Capital)

Counts as Income Counts as Capital
Salary/wages Savings
State pension Investments
Private pension income Property
Rental income Premium Bonds
Dividend income Lottery winnings
Interest (if regular) Pension lump sum
Annuity payments Inheritance
Trust income distributions ISA withdrawals

The test: Would withdrawing this money reduce your capital or savings? If yes, it’s capital.

2. Part of Normal Expenditure

The gifts must be:

  • Regular or habitual (not one-off)
  • Committed or intended to continue
  • Part of your normal spending pattern

What makes it “normal”:

  • Standing order paying school fees every term
  • Monthly transfers to children
  • Annual birthday gifts of £1,000 each
  • Regular premium payments on life insurance for others

What’s NOT normal:

  • Random gifts when you feel like it
  • One large gift without precedent
  • Gifts that vary wildly in amount

3. Leaves Sufficient Income to Maintain Standard of Living

After making gifts, you must still have enough to:

  • Pay normal bills and expenses
  • Maintain your usual lifestyle
  • Not need to dip into capital

Key point: You don’t need to be wealthy. The exemption works on the surplus between income and expenditure, whatever level that’s at.

How to Calculate Surplus Income

Annual Income Assessment

Income Source Amount
State pension £11,500
Private pension £25,000
Rental income £8,000
Dividends £3,000
Total Annual Income £47,500

Normal Expenditure

Expense Amount
Council tax £2,200
Utilities £2,400
Food/groceries £5,200
Car costs £3,000
Insurance £1,500
Clothing £1,200
Entertainment £3,000
Holidays £4,000
Healthcare £1,500
Home maintenance £2,000
Other £3,000
Total Expenditure £29,000

Surplus Available for Gifting

Item Amount
Total income £47,500
Total expenditure -£29,000
Surplus available £18,500

This £18,500 could be gifted every year, completely IHT-free.

Examples in Practice

Example 1: Retired Couple Helping Children

Item Husband Wife Combined
Pension income £30,000 £20,000 £50,000
Joint expenses £32,000
Surplus £18,000
Gift to each child (3) £6,000 each
Annual exempt gifts £18,000

Over 10 years: £180,000 passes tax-free — no 7-year wait.

Example 2: High-Income Professional

Item Amount
Salary £150,000
Investment income £10,000
Total income £160,000
Tax paid -£55,000
Living expenses -£60,000
Surplus £45,000

Could gift £45,000/year — £450,000 over 10 years exempt.

Example 3: Paying Grandchildren’s School Fees

Item Amount
Combined pension £65,000
Living costs £35,000
Surplus £30,000
School fees (2 grandchildren) £28,000
Exempt gift £28,000/year

7 years of school = £196,000 exempt — no waiting period.

Example 4: Premium Payments on Life Insurance

Item Amount
Income £80,000
Expenses £50,000
Surplus £30,000
Life insurance premium (in trust) £12,000/year
Other gifts £15,000/year
Total exempt £27,000/year

Record-Keeping Requirements

What to Document

Record Purpose
Annual income summary Proves income sources
Bank statements Shows money flow
Expenditure breakdown Proves living costs
Gift records Dates, amounts, recipients
Standing order evidence Shows regularity
Tax returns Third-party income verification

Annual Record Template

Create a spreadsheet with these columns:

Income sheet:

Month Salary Pension Dividends Rent Other Total
Apr
May
Total

Expenditure sheet:

Category Apr May Jun Annual
Housing
Utilities
Food
Transport
Other
Total

Gifts sheet:

Date Recipient Amount What For Running Total

How Long to Keep Records

Keep records for:

  • Minimum 7 years (to cover any 7-year PET queries)
  • Ideally indefinitely (executors need them after death)
  • Store securely with will and estate planning documents

Common Questions

Can I Give Different Amounts Each Year?

Yes, but there should be a pattern or commitment. Better to:

  • Commit to a fixed monthly amount
  • Adjust once per year based on circumstances
  • Document any changes and reasons

What If Income Varies?

Situation Approach
Bonus year Don’t gift the bonus — it’s one-off
Dividend varies Use average, or only gift minimum expected
Income drops Reduce gifts to match new surplus
One-time windfall Cannot gift this as “income”

Can I Gift Accumulated Interest?

Accumulated interest that’s been building up in a savings account is capital, not income. But:

  • Interest received regularly and gifted promptly = income
  • Standing order setting up automatic transfer of interest = clearly income

What About Premium Bonds Prizes?

These are windfalls/surprises — not regular income. Not suitable for this exemption.

Is a One-Off Gift Ever Exempt?

No — by definition, one-off gifts can’t be “normal expenditure.” But you can start a pattern with intention to continue, even if death intervenes early.

The IHT403 Form

What Is Form IHT403?

  • Completed by executors after death
  • Claims the normal expenditure exemption
  • Requires detailed income/expenditure evidence
  • Attached to main IHT400 account

What Executors Need

Information Detail
Income sources and amounts For years gifts were made
Expenditure breakdown Normal living costs
Gift schedule Every gift with dates/amounts
Evidence of pattern Standing orders, regularity
Proof gifts from income Not capital erosion

Without Good Records

If you don’t keep records:

  • Executors must estimate from bank statements
  • HMRC may challenge the exemption
  • Gifts might be treated as PETs instead
  • IHT potentially payable if died within 7 years

Practical Tips

Make It Easy to Prove

Action Why It Helps
Use standing orders Shows regularity automatically
Pay from current account Income arrives, gift leaves
Same amounts each time Clearer pattern
Annual review Document any changes
Tell your executors They need to claim it

What to Avoid

Mistake Problem
Erratic gift amounts Harder to prove “normal”
Gifts from savings Disqualified — that’s capital
Reducing your lifestyle Fails the “sufficient income” test
No documentation Executors can’t prove exemption
Gift more than surplus Excess comes from capital

Combining with Other Exemptions

You can use gifts from income alongside:

  • £3,000 annual exemption
  • £250 small gifts exemption
  • Wedding gift exemptions
  • Gifts to charity

Example combination:

Exemption Amount
Annual exemption £3,000
Gifts from income £20,000
Small gifts (4 × £250) £1,000
Total exempt in year £24,000

Getting Started

Step 1: Calculate Your Surplus

Review last year’s bank statements:

  • Total all income sources
  • Total all regular expenditure
  • The difference is your potential gift capacity

Step 2: Set Up Regular Gifts

  • Standing order from current account
  • Fixed amount monthly or quarterly
  • To children, grandchildren, or others

Step 3: Start Record-Keeping

  • Create annual spreadsheet
  • Update monthly or quarterly
  • Store with important documents
  • Tell executors where records are

Step 4: Review Annually

  • Check income hasn’t changed significantly
  • Adjust gifts if surplus changes
  • Update records
  • Ensure still within means

Professional Advice

Consider consulting a financial adviser or tax specialist if:

  • Large amounts involved (£20,000+/year)
  • Complex income sources
  • Want formal documentation reviewed
  • Part of larger IHT planning
  • Any uncertainty about qualification

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Inheritance Tax exemptions
  2. HMRC — IHT403 form guidance
  3. HMRC Manual — Normal expenditure exemption