Advanced Planning8 min read

Chargeable Lifetime Transfers vs. PETs: Choosing the Right Gift

By ACJ Financial Planning

Large gifts to trusts are taxed up-front at 20%, but they can still beat the 40% bill later. Here's the maths.

Definitions

A PET is a gift to an individual, potentially exempt after 7 years. A CLT (e.g. gift to most trusts) is taxed immediately at 20% on the value above the NRB.

Bar chart comparing PET and CLT tax over time

Why pay 20% now?

If the donor survives 7 years, no further IHT applies and growth occurs outside the estate. For fast-growing assets the arithmetic favours a CLT despite the entry charge.

Worked example – £600k gift to discretionary trust

  • Immediate IHT: (£600k – £325k) × 20% = £55k
  • After 10 years growth at 6% p.a. → £1.073m
  • Had donor kept the asset, the extra £748k growth would be taxed at 40% = £299k
Clock symbolising the seven-year survival period for gifts

Result: £244k net tax saved and control retained by trustees – but watch the 10-year periodic charges.

Need Professional IHT Advice?

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