MP Estate Planning UK

Business Property Relief Explained: Save Inheritance Tax

business property relief

We explain business property relief in plain English so you can see what it means for your family and assets.

From 6 April 2026 a combined £1,000,000 cap will apply to full relief on qualifying interests. Amounts above that will get 50% relief, so the effective inheritance tax rate can rise to 20% on the excess.

We will set the scene on why inheritance tax has become more urgent for owners of trading concerns and land. This guide shows what HMRC means by qualifying interests and why the label on the tin does not always match the outcome.

We walk through how relief can lower the taxable value of assets and why that can keep a concern in the family rather than forcing a sale.

We flag common gotchas — ownership tests, trading versus investment, and assets not used in the business — so you read the rest with the right questions for advisers.

Key Takeaways

  • From April 2026 a £1,000,000 cap limits full relief per person and per existing trust.
  • Amounts above the cap get 50% relief, effectively a 20% inheritance tax on the excess.
  • Not all labelled interests qualify; HMRC tests trading use and ownership length.
  • Understanding qualifying assets can mean the difference between keeping an enterprise and a forced sale.
  • Ask advisers about trusts, lifetime gifts, AIM shares and farm structures early.

Why Business Property Relief matters for inheritance tax planning in the UK

A thriving concern on paper can become a cash problem at probate.

Standard inheritance tax sits at 40% above the nil‑rate band (£325,000). That rate does not change when relief applies; instead, the taxable value of qualifying assets is reduced first. This difference is the crucial part of how relief helps.

inheritance tax

Put simply: reducing value before the rate is applied can cut the final bill sharply. That matters when an estate is rich in holdings but poor in cash.

How a cash crunch can force bad choices

Executors often must pay IHT in cash within months. If relief is limited or capped, families may be pushed to borrow, sell shares, or sell part of the concern — often at short notice and on unfavourable terms.

“A high valuation with low cashflow creates the real risk — not the headline tax rate.”

  • We break down how a 40% charge can arise and the maths behind reducing the taxable value.
  • We highlight warning signs: rapid value growth with little matching cashflow.
  • We stress timing: evidence and ownership periods matter for a successful claim, so act now rather than later.

In short, relief can change the way a family passes on what they built — but only if timing, evidence and liquidity are managed first.

What’s changing from April 2026 for BPR and Agricultural Property Relief

From 6 April 2026 a new cap limits full 100% relief to the first £1,000,000 of combined qualifying holdings per person or existing trust.

Above that figure relief drops to 50% on the excess. That commonly produces an effective 20% IHT charge on the over‑cap amount at death.

business property relief

The combined £1,000,000 cap and the effect above it

Instead of separate allowances, agricultural property relief and business property relief now share a single cap. This means mixed assets compete for the same allowance.

Practically, once combined holdings exceed £1,000,000, the extra value will attract 50% relief and therefore a 20% inheritance tax cost on death.

Why non‑transferability between spouses matters

The allowance is not transferable on first death. Couples can no longer double the protected amount simply by waiting for the first partner to die.

This shifts the timing of decisions. Many families may consider earlier gifting, trusts or partial sales to manage future IHT exposure.

ItemBefore 6 Apr 2026From 6 Apr 2026
Max full 100% protection per personEffectively unlimited (subject to rules)£1,000,000 combined
Relief on excessOften 100% if qualifying50% on amount > £1,000,000 (20% effective IHT)
Transfer between spousesCommon planning allowedNot transferable
Likely family actionsLater lifetime movesEarlier gifting, trusts, or sales considered

What counts as “business property” for relief purposes

HMRC tests what an asset does, not the label it wears. That practical test decides whether an item may qualify for relief.

business property

Unlisted company shares and ownership interests

Shares in unlisted companies commonly qualify when the firm trades rather than holds investments. The company’s activity matters as much as the share certificate.

Ownership interests in a sole trade or partnership can also qualify. Evidence of active involvement, income flow and trading contracts helps prove the point.

Land, buildings and machinery used in trade

Land, buildings and machinery count if they are used in the running of the trade. If you merely rent out a building, it usually will not qualify.

Practical example: a personally owned workshop that the company uses may qualify if the use is integral and documented.

Quoted shares and control holdings

Control holdings in quoted companies rarely get full relief. In some cases, 50% relief applies instead of 100%.

“Control alone does not guarantee full protection — use and substance do.”

Asset typeTypical outcomeKey test
Unlisted sharesOften 100%Company carries on a qualifying trade
Partnership/sole trader interestOften 100%Active trading role and supporting evidence
Land/buildings/machinery100% if used in tradeUse in the business, not passive investment
Quoted control sharesOften 50%Control but quoted status limits full relief

Practical tip: check whether an asset is used in the trade and keep records of use and leases. For further detail on how this interacts with wider tax changes see our guide on business inheritance tax relief.

Eligibility rules HMRC applies to Business Property Relief

The key tests from HMRC focus on ownership length, the nature of activity, and actual use of assets.

Two-year ownership condition: an interest must usually have been held for at least two years before the relevant date. Reorganisations, recent share issues or last-minute transfers can reset the clock.

The two-year ownership condition and timing traps

Timing matters. If the holding changes shortly before death, or if shares are issued to a trust recently, the two years may not be met.

Watch out for corporate restructures. They can interrupt continuous ownership and block the claim.

Trading vs investment activities and where the line is drawn

HMRC asks whether the enterprise is trading, not merely holding investments.

Letting property, holding long-term securities or running an investment portfolio often points away from qualifying as trading.

When assets are excluded because they weren’t used for business purposes

Assets not used in the running of the trade are excluded. Examples: surplus cash, dormant investments, or personal assets not in active use.

  • Quick checklist to self-test: held for two years; activity is predominantly trading; asset used in day‑to‑day operations.
  • Keep contracts, invoices and minutes as evidence of use.
  • For mixed activities, get specialist advice early — small changes can change the tax outcome.

eligibility rules two years

How much relief can you get: 100% vs 50% rates

How an asset is held and used often decides whether it enjoys full protection or just a partial cut.

100% relief usually applies to unlisted company shares and direct ownership interests in a trading concern. If the company carries on a qualifying trade and the ownership tests are met, the taxable value of those shares can be reduced to nil for inheritance tax purposes.

When 100% relief is typically available

The clearest cases are qualifying unlisted shares and partnership or sole‑trader interests. The company’s activity must be trading, not merely holding investments.

Documents that help: up‑to‑date valuations, accounts showing trading income, shareholder agreements and minutes proving active use.

inheritance tax

Common scenarios that only qualify for 50% relief

Personal land, buildings or machinery owned outside the company but used by a trading firm often get 50% rather than 100% relief. The same applies to shares in a quoted company where the donor had control.

That 50% position changes the taxable value — so a large asset can still leave a meaningful inheritance tax bill, especially once the post‑2026 £1,000,000 cap is applied.

  • Practical check: confirm who owns the asset and how it is used day‑to‑day.
  • Valuation proof: professional valuation, leases, invoices and service agreements support the claim.
  • Ask advisers: check whether a qualifying trade test and the two‑year ownership rule are satisfied before relying on a rate.

“Proof of use and clear ownership records are often the difference between full cover and only half.”

business property relief estate planning strategies uk: choosing the right route

Deciding whether to pass a firm on at death or transfer shares during your lifetime is as much about family dynamics as it is about tax.

Passing at death keeps control and income until the end. It can preserve dividends for the owner. But the new £1,000,000 cap from 6 April 2026 changes the picture. The cap is per person and per pre‑existing trust and is not transferable between spouses.

Lifetime transfer can reduce immediate inheritance tax exposure. It may also disrupt income and control. Transfers are emotional. They affect family fairness and who runs the concern day‑to‑day.

business property relief estate planning

Practical prompts and next steps

  • Do you need dividends to live on?
  • Is a successor ready and willing?
  • Could ownership splits or existing trusts preserve more allowance?

Get advice before changing share classes or making large transfers. Small moves can lose relief. For a closer look at the £1m cap and options, see our guide on inheritance tax threshold £1 million.

RouteKey benefitMain risk
Pass at deathKeep control and incomeCap may limit full protection
Transfer in lifetimeReduce future inheritance taxLoss of income/control; emotional cost
Use pre‑existing trustSeparate allowance and successionComplex setup; professional fees

Lifetime gifting of business assets and the seven-year rule

Surviving a set period after a transfer often decides whether a gift stays outside the taxable estate.

Potentially exempt transfers mean a gift is ignored for inheritance tax if the donor lives seven years after the transfer. If the donor dies sooner, taper relief may reduce the charge, or full tax may apply.

Gift with Reservation and continued benefit

Gifts can be undone by the Gift with Reservation rules. If you keep using what you gave away, the value may be pulled back into your estate.

“Giving shares but taking the income back is a common trap that pulls the gift back for tax purposes.”

Capital Gains Tax and holdover relief

Giving assets can trigger Capital Gains Tax on any gain. For certain business assets and qualifying shares, holdover relief can defer the gain until the recipient later disposes of them.

IssueWhat happensPractical step
Seven yearsGift becomes outside the estate if donor survivesDocument the date and keep evidence of transfer
Gift with ReservationContinued benefit can bring value back inAvoid personal use or provide market rent
Capital Gains TaxMay arise on gifting assetsCheck eligibility for holdover relief

Practical checklist: record transfers, update share registers, agree dividend rights and get specialist advice early. Small steps now can protect value later.

Using trusts with business property to manage control and succession

A trust can separate legal ownership from day‑to‑day management so a business continues to run smoothly. That separation helps families keep control while protecting vulnerable beneficiaries.

Trusts are used to decide who votes, who gets income and what happens if relationships change. Trustees act as steady hands during transitions.

Trusts can also affect inheritance tax outcomes. From 6 April 2026, a £1,000,000 full‑relief allowance applies per person and per pre‑existing trust, so existing trusts deserve an early review.

When a trust supports long‑term protection

  • Provide succession where not every family member is ready to run operations.
  • Protect income for vulnerable beneficiaries without handing over control.
  • Reduce the risk of a forced sale by smoothing decision making at a death.

What to review in a pre‑existing trust

Check the trust deed, any letters of wishes, company articles and historic transfers. Clear documents reduce disputes.

Practical steps: update governance, confirm trustee powers, and evidence transfers to preserve the trust’s allowance and intended outcomes.

“A well‑governed trust is often the difference between smooth succession and a family dispute.”

Combining BPR with Agricultural Property Relief for farms and rural estates

When agricultural land and a trading farm sit together, the rules for relief overlap and can surprise families.

What APR covers: qualifying farmland and farm buildings used in farming can get agricultural property relief. The trading arm — machinery, livestock trading or a farm shop — may qualify under business property relief.

How the two interact

From 6 April 2026, 100% cover is capped at a combined £1,000,000 per person or pre‑existing trust. Above that, amounts get 50% relief, creating an effective 20% IHT on the excess. This makes land‑rich holdings vulnerable even if cashflow is low.

Practical structuring points

  • Keep clear records showing what land is used for and who occupies it.
  • Separate trading activities and passive lettings to protect qualifying parts.
  • Discuss fairness of succession where some children work on the farm and others do not.
ElementTypical outcomeKey evidence
FarmlandOften 100% under APR (if qualifying)Farming use, tenancy or occupation records
Farm buildingsMay qualify under APR or BPRUsage logs, repairs, business accounts
Trading activitiesLikely BPR if genuinely tradingSales records, staff, contracts

Talk to land agents, accountants and solicitors early. For a detailed explanation of the 2026 change see the update on 2026 agricultural and property relief changes.

AIM shares and Business Relief: investor-led options and risks

AIM-listed shares attract attention for succession planning thanks to potential tax benefits, yet the detail matters more than the label.

Certain AIM holdings may qualify for inheritance tax relief if the underlying company carries on a qualifying trade and the usual conditions are met.

How AIM holdings can qualify and what “qualifying trade” means

Qualifying trade means the company’s main activity is trading, not holding investments. Evidence of sales, staff and customers matters.

The typical two‑year ownership test applies. A short holding or a recent corporate restructure can block a claim.

Volatility, concentration risk, and suitability for wealth planning

AIM shares can be volatile. A relief-driven position can lose value quickly if the market falls.

Concentration risk is real. Relying on one stock to save tax can reduce long‑term wealth.

  • Check the company’s activity and accounts before investing.
  • Keep the two‑year horizon in mind and avoid last‑minute moves.
  • Consider diversification rather than swapping cash for a single AIM holding.
AspectWhat to checkRisk
Qualifying tradeTrading revenue, employees, contractsInvestment holding status may disqualify
Holding periodTwo years continuous ownershipRecent gifts or issues can reset clock
SuitabilityFits long horizon and risk toleranceShort-term needs may suffer from volatility

Practical note: AIM shares are an option, not a substitute for passing on your own firm. Business owners should prioritise core succession before using market investments to target tax outcomes.

We recommend regulated financial advice when using AIM portfolios to support inheritance goals. That step protects both your wealth and family plans.

Family governance and succession planning in light of IHT reforms

Succession succeeds when families agree on purpose before they agree on shares. We start with values and a clear vision. That way decisions fit the family, not just the numbers.

Starting with purpose: values, vision, and who the “family” is

Agree who counts as family. Include in‑laws and future generations where needed. Write a short statement of values. Keep it simple and shared.

Defining roles, appointment and removal processes

Define who runs day‑to‑day and who has final say. Use clear appointment and removal steps. Written rules avoid assumptions and reduce disputes.

Documenting dividends, distributions and cashflow expectations

Record how dividends and distributions work. Set expectations for income and any lifetime gifts. That reduces friction when money and control move.

Bridging the Next Gen readiness gap

STEP Journal commentary (July 2025) warns reforms may drive more lifetime gifting. US research shows an 85% Next‑Gen readiness number versus 39% for family offices. Train successors. Small, practical steps protect wealth and smooth inheritance outcomes.

Common pitfalls that can reduce or eliminate relief

Small changes in how assets are used can quietly strip away tax cover when you least expect it.

Investment-heavy activity and the “wholly or mainly” test

If a company shifts from trading to holding investments, HMRC can deny relief. Large passive holdings, rental income or long-term securities often break the test.

Selling and the three-year reinvestment window

Proceeds from a sale lose qualifying status unless reinvested into another qualifying company within three years. Miss the window and the cash is treated as non-qualifying.

Valuations, evidence and HMRC challenge at probate

Claims are submitted at probate and often face scrutiny. Weak valuations, missing minutes or no trading narrative invite challenge.

  • Good evidence: accounts, contracts, board minutes and invoices.
  • Clear valuation reports and explanations for minority discounts.
  • Documentation showing assets are used in the day-to-day running of the company.

Before you gift shares or sign sale papers, check assumptions with specialist advice. For the holdover timing rules see our note on the three‑year window: discover the hold‑over time limit.

Conclusion

The post‑2026 cap changes the math for many family holdings, so acting early matters.

Relief still matters. But the new £1,000,000 combined cap and 50% cover above it mean more inheritance tax may fall due at death. Small errors on timing, ownership or evidence can cost dearly.

Check what qualifies in your company and your land. Stress‑test cash needs. Document governance, update wills and align shareholder agreements so the story at probate is clear.

Gifts and lifetime transfers can help, but only when they suit income needs and family readiness. Speak to a qualified adviser team to test assumptions and make practical changes that protect wealth and keep the family on steady ground.

FAQ

What is Business Property Relief and how can it reduce inheritance tax?

Business Property Relief (BPR) can reduce the taxable value of qualifying assets by either 100% or 50% for Inheritance Tax (IHT) purposes. If an asset meets HMRC’s conditions, its value is deducted from the estate before IHT is calculated, which can significantly lower or remove a bill on death. We always check ownership, use, and timing to see if relief applies.

Why does this relief matter when planning to protect family wealth?

Relief helps preserve the business or land for the next generation instead of forcing a sale to pay IHT. For family owners aged 45–75, it’s a way to keep income and control within the family while lowering future tax exposure. It also affects liquidity decisions and wider succession plans.

What changes from April 2026 should owners be aware of?

From April 2026 there will be a combined £1 million cap on 100% relief across BPR and Agricultural Property Relief (APR). Amounts above that cap may face an effective 20% IHT charge rather than full exemption. The cap won’t be transferable between spouses, which alters how couples must structure ownership and gifts.

Which types of assets normally qualify for the relief?

Typical qualifying assets include unlisted company shares, ownership interests in active trades, and land, buildings or machinery genuinely used in a qualifying trade. Certain control holdings in quoted firms may attract 50% relief if stringent conditions are met.

What are the key HMRC eligibility rules to watch?

The main tests are use and ownership. Assets generally must be used in a qualifying trade and owned for two years before death to get full relief. Investment activities, lettings or dormant assets tend to be excluded. Timing traps and changes in use can remove relief.

When is 100% relief available and when is it only 50%?

100% relief usually applies to unlisted shares or assets wholly used in a qualifying trade. Fifty per cent relief is common for certain holdings in quoted companies or assets that don’t meet the full trading test. Each case needs a close facts-based assessment.

Should we pass the business on at death or transfer it during lifetime?

Both routes have pros and cons. Passing at death may preserve relief and control but can trigger higher IHT bills if the cap applies. Lifetime transfers can remove value from the estate but must consider the seven-year rule, control, income needs and family expectations. We help weigh tax, control and cashflow impacts.

How does the seven-year rule affect lifetime gifts of qualifying assets?

A gift may become exempt if the donor survives seven years after making it (a Potentially Exempt Transfer). If the donor dies within seven years, taper relief may reduce IHT on the gift. Beware Gift with Reservation rules: if the donor continues to benefit from the asset, the gift can be ignored for IHT.

Can trusts be used to protect qualifying assets and maintain control?

Yes. Trusts can help manage succession and protect family members while aiming to secure relief. However, trusts bring their own tax rules and reporting duties. Trusts set up before April 2026 may need review to fit the new cap and reporting changes.

How do BPR and Agricultural Property Relief interact for farms?

For mixed rural businesses, APR can apply to farmland and buildings used agriculturally while BPR covers trading elements. Careful structuring of land, plant and trading activity is needed to maximise combined relief and avoid unexpected tax bills.

Can AIM shares qualify for Business Relief and when are they suitable?

AIM shares can qualify if the company carries on a qualifying trade and meets HMRC’s conditions for the required period. They offer an investor-led route to relief but bring market volatility and concentration risk, so suitability depends on the family’s risk appetite and liquidity needs.

How should families start their governance and succession work given recent reforms?

Begin with purpose: agree family values, long-term vision and who counts as family. Define roles, appointment and removal steps, and document dividend and cashflow expectations. Clear governance reduces disputes and helps align tax-efficient transfers with succession goals.

What common pitfalls can reduce or eliminate relief?

Frequent pitfalls include investment-heavy activities that fail the “wholly or mainly” trading test, selling a business and not using reinvestment rules within three years, poor evidence for valuations, and changes of use close to death. HMRC challenges at probate are a real risk without good paperwork.

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