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Pensions & IHT - Wills, Tax & Trusts Ltd

Agricultural Property Relief and Pension Planning

Inheritance Tax Planning for Farming Families in Light of the 2027 Pension Changes

For farming families and landowners, inheritance tax planning has always involved a careful balance. Agricultural Property Relief has long provided meaningful protection for qualifying land and buildings — in many cases eliminating the IHT charge on those assets entirely. And until recently, pension funds sat outside the taxable estate, providing a complementary layer of planning flexibility.

Both of those positions are now under pressure. The reforms confirmed in the Autumn Budget 2024 will change the treatment of pension funds for inheritance tax purposes from April 2027. For farming estates that hold both agricultural assets and significant pension savings, the combined effect requires careful and prompt attention.

FAQs: Agricultural Property Relief

Agricultural Property Relief: How It Works

Agricultural Property Relief reduces the taxable value of qualifying agricultural property for inheritance tax purposes. Where the conditions are met, the relief can eliminate or substantially reduce the IHT charge on agricultural land, farm buildings and certain farmhouses — allowing assets that represent the work of generations to pass to the next without being dismantled to meet a tax bill.

The relief applies at either 100% or 50%, depending on the nature of the ownership and occupation arrangement:

100% relief applies where the agricultural property is occupied by the owner for the purposes of agriculture, or where it is let on a tenancy beginning on or after 1 September 1995 under the Agricultural Tenancies Act 1995.

50% relief applies to land let on older tenancies — those granted before 1 September 1995 — where the owner does not occupy the land themselves.

To qualify, the property must have been owned for at least two years if occupied by the owner, or five years if let to a tenant. The land must be agricultural in character and used for agricultural purposes. Relief extends to the farmhouse where it is of a character appropriate to the farming operation — a condition that HMRC applies with scrutiny, particularly where a farmhouse is large relative to the scale of the farming activity.

Relief does not apply automatically to the full value of a farm. Buildings, equipment and other non-agricultural elements may not qualify. Excepted assets – those not used for the agricultural trade – are excluded. Where a farm also has development value, only the agricultural value attracts relief; any hope or development value above that remains taxable.

What Changes From April 2027

From 6 April 2027, most unused defined contribution pension funds will be brought within the scope of inheritance tax. Where they are currently excluded from the taxable estate, they will — if the proposals proceed as announced — be assessed as part of the deceased's estate and potentially subject to the standard 40% charge on amounts above the available nil-rate band.

For farming families, this change creates a compounding problem that did not exist in the same form previously.

Agricultural land, even where fully relieved by APR, still forms part of the gross estate for the purposes of assessing the residence nil-rate band taper. The RNRB — currently £175,000 per individual — begins to reduce once the net estate exceeds £2 million, at a rate of £1 for every £2 above that threshold. The RNRB disappears entirely when the net estate exceeds £2.35 million for a single individual, or £2.7 million for a married couple with both allowances available.

When a pension fund that previously sat outside the estate is brought within it, the estate value increases — potentially pushing estates above the RNRB taper threshold, reducing or eliminating a previously available allowance, and increasing the overall tax liability beyond what APR alone can address.

The Double Taxation Risk After Age 75

For farming families where the principal individual is over 75 or approaching that age with significant pension savings, there is a specific risk that warrants direct attention.

Before age 75, pension funds passed to beneficiaries on the member's death are generally free of income tax in the hands of the recipient — though from April 2027 they may carry an IHT charge at the estate level. After age 75, pension withdrawals by beneficiaries are taxed as income at their marginal rate, in addition to any IHT charge at the estate level.

The combined effect, where both layers apply, can be substantial. An additional rate taxpayer receiving pension funds from an estate that has also been subject to IHT may face an effective combined rate that significantly erodes the inherited value. This is not a hypothetical concern — it is a direct consequence of the way the two tax charges interact, and it is one that requires active planning rather than a passive approach.

A Practical Illustration

Consider a farming estate comprising:

  • £1.5 million in agricultural land and buildings, qualifying for 100% APR.

  • £800,000 in an uncrystallised pension fund.

  • A farmhouse and other personal assets totalling £400,000.

Before April 2027, the pension sits outside the taxable estate. The agricultural land attracts full relief. The estate's exposure to IHT is limited to the non-agricultural, non-pension assets — potentially manageable within the available nil-rate bands.

From April 2027, the £800,000 pension fund is included in the estate. Total estate value rises to £2.7 million. The inclusion of the pension not only creates potential IHT exposure on that element directly — it may also reduce or eliminate the RNRB, adding further liability. The farmhouse and personal assets, which might previously have been covered by the available allowances, now sit in a higher net estate and face a greater tax charge.

The agricultural land itself remains protected by APR. But the broader estate, viewed as a whole, faces a materially higher liability than the family may currently anticipate.

Planning Considerations for Farming Families

The most effective response to the April 2027 changes is not to wait until they take effect. The options available to farming families before the change are broader than those available after it.

Pension Drawdown Strategy

For those approaching or past retirement, a structured programme of pension withdrawals during lifetime — carefully managed against income tax thresholds — allows funds to be extracted from the pension and repositioned into structures that are more efficient for inheritance tax purposes, whether through gifts, trust arrangements or other vehicles.

Gifting From Pension Income

Pension income drawn regularly may, in qualifying circumstances, be gifted under the normal expenditure out of income exemption. This is a technically specific relief requiring careful evidencing and record-keeping, but it can be highly effective where the conditions are met.

RNRB Preservation

Where the inclusion of pension funds risks pushing the estate above the RNRB taper threshold, strategies that reduce overall estate value — including lifetime gifts and pension drawdown — may preserve an allowance that would otherwise be lost.

Reviewing Beneficiary Nominations

Pension funds pass to beneficiaries through a nomination rather than a will. In light of the proposed changes, nominations should be reviewed to ensure they reflect the most tax-efficient distribution given the new rules, taking into account the tax positions of potential beneficiaries.

Trust Arrangements

Where assets are being repositioned out of a pension, trust structures may offer a route to removing those assets from the taxable estate while retaining a degree of control over their ultimate distribution.

The right combination of these approaches depends on the specific composition of the estate, the age and health of the individual, the income needs during the lifetime and the intentions for what is passed on. There is no single solution that fits every farming estate.

Related Guides

  • Pension Tax Relief — how pension tax relief works and its role in broader estate and retirement planning.

  • Business Relief — how Business Property Relief operates, including the reforms taking effect from April 2026, and the interaction with pension planning for business-owning farming families.

How Wills, Tax & Trusts Ltd. Can Help

Ray L. Best and the team at Wills, Tax & Trusts work with farming families and landowners across the UK, helping them understand the inheritance tax position of their estate and develop planning strategies that reflect both the current rules and the changes ahead.

For farming estates, this means examining the agricultural assets and their qualification for relief, the pension position and the likely effect of the 2027 changes, the wider estate structure and any liquidity considerations — and producing a clear, practical assessment of what planning is appropriate and when.

The families best positioned to manage these changes are those who begin the conversation now, while the full range of planning options remains available.

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