The “7 year rule” is one of the most talked about concepts in UK Inheritance Tax (IHT), but it is also one of the most misunderstood. The rule is linked to potentially exempt transfers (PETs), which are lifetime gifts that can become IHT free if the donor survives for long enough.
Used properly, it can reduce the taxable value of an estate. Used casually, it can create messy record keeping, unexpected tax outcomes, and family confusion.
What the 7 year rule actually means
If you give assets to an individual (or make certain other transfers) during your lifetime, that gift may be treated as a PET. If you survive for seven years from the date of the gift, the value generally falls outside your estate for IHT.
If you die within seven years, some or all of the gift may be brought back into the IHT calculation.
The planning timeline
At the time of the gift (Year 0)
- Record the amount or asset, the date, and who received it.
- Check whether any exemption applies (annual exemption, small gifts, wedding gifts, surplus income). Exempt gifts may not rely on the 7 year rule at all.
Years 0 to 3
- If death occurs in this period, the gift can become chargeable and may use the nil rate band first.
Years 3 to 7
- Taper relief may reduce the tax due on the gift if death occurs after year 3, but before year 7. Taper relief reduces tax, not the size of the gift.
After 7 years
- The gift is generally outside the estate for IHT.
The big trap, gifts with reservation of benefit
If you “give” an asset away but still benefit from it, it may be treated as still in your estate. A common example is giving a home to children but continuing to live in it rent free. Another is gifting an asset but keeping enjoyment or income in a way that breaks the rules.
This issue alone is why many families get advice before transferring property.
How it links to asset protection and family risk
The 7 year rule is about the donor’s IHT position. It does not automatically protect assets from risks in the recipient’s life, such as divorce, bankruptcy, or poor decision making. Once you gift an asset outright, it is theirs.
For that reason, families often evaluate whether some gifts should be made via trust, or whether the will should include protective structures.
Practical steps for a workable 7 year plan
- Make gifts you can afford without putting pressure on retirement cash flow.
- Use easy exemptions first, then consider larger PETs if appropriate.
- Keep a gifting register, including bank transfers and valuations for non cash assets.
- Review your will after significant gifts.
- Consider insurance in some cases to cover potential tax during the 7 year period (subject to advice).
Key takeaways
- A PET becomes IHT free if you survive 7 years.
- Dying within 7 years can bring the gift back into the IHT calculation.
- Gifts with reservation of benefit can fail.
- The best outcomes come from coordinating gifts with the rest of the estate plan.
