Benefits of Charitable Giving in Estate Planning UK

charitable trusts in estate planning

Quick answer

Charitable giving in your estate plan may reduce your inheritance tax bill while supporting causes you care about. In England and Wales, if you leave at least 10% of your net estate to registered charities, the IHT rate on the remainder typically drops from 40% to 36%. Your nil-rate band remains £325,000 (gov.uk — Inheritance Tax) in 2026/27, and gifts to charity are generally exempt from IHT entirely, meaning more of your estate may pass to both charities and your beneficiaries. Beyond tax savings, charitable bequests allow you to create lasting philanthropic impact and may qualify your estate for additional reliefs. This guide explains charitable giving in 2026/27, how the 10% charitable donation relief works, and the tax benefits available under current England and Wales law.

Last reviewed: 24 May 2026 by the MP Estate Planning editorial team. Jurisdiction: England and Wales. Scotland and Northern Ireland have different probate and intestacy rules; the IHT thresholds are UK-wide.

Ever thought about how your estate plan could support the causes closest to your heart — while also reducing your family’s inheritance tax bill? Adding charitable giving to your estate planning lets you align your values with your financial legacy, creating a positive impact that lasts long after you’re gone.

In the UK, charitable donations play a vital role in funding thousands of causes and organisations. By weaving philanthropy into your estate plan, you can direct assets to meaningful causes and potentially reduce the inheritance tax (IHT) your estate owes. This means more goes where you want it — both to your chosen charities and to your loved ones.

Planning your estate with charity in mind unlocks real tax benefits under UK law. For example, if you leave at least 10% of your net estate to qualifying charities, the IHT rate on the remainder drops from 40% to 36%. On a taxable estate of £500,000, that could save your beneficiaries thousands of pounds — while supporting the causes you believe in.

We’ll explore how charitable giving fits into estate planning under English and Welsh law. We’ll cover different types of donations, charitable trusts, and the tax implications of your generosity. Understanding these options helps you make informed decisions about the legacy you leave behind.

Key Takeaways

  • Charitable giving in estate planning aligns personal values with your financial legacy
  • Donations to qualifying UK charities are completely exempt from inheritance tax
  • Leaving at least 10% of your net estate to charity reduces the IHT rate from 40% to 36%
  • Various types of contributions are possible, including cash, property, shares, and other assets
  • Charitable trusts offer flexibility in managing donations and supporting multiple causes over time
  • Professional advice from an experienced solicitor or estate planning specialist is essential for effective charitable planning
  • Philanthropic giving creates a lasting impact on your chosen causes while benefiting your wider estate plan

Understanding Charitable Giving in Estate Planning

Charitable giving is a powerful element of estate planning. It lets you support causes you care about while managing your wealth tax-efficiently. In the UK, growing numbers of families are incorporating philanthropy into their estate plans — working with specialist estate planners and will writing professionals to make every pound count.

Defining Charitable Giving in Estate Context

Charitable giving in estate planning means directing part of your wealth to registered charities, either during your lifetime or on death. This can include regular donations, legacies in your will, lifetime gifts of assets, or establishing charitable trusts. An experienced estate planning specialist can help you structure these gifts to maximise their impact — both for the charity and for your estate’s tax position.

Importance of Integrating Philanthropy into Estate Plans

Weaving philanthropy into your estate plan delivers real, measurable benefits. It creates a legacy that reflects your values, and under UK tax law, it can significantly reduce the inheritance tax your estate pays. The most valuable relief comes from the 36% reduced rate: if at least 10% of your net estate (after deducting the nil rate band, any reliefs, and exemptions) passes to charity, the IHT rate on the taxable remainder falls from 40% to 36%. On larger estates, this saving can amount to tens of thousands of pounds — money that goes to your family instead of HMRC.

Legal Framework for Charitable Donations in the UK

UK law provides a clear framework to encourage charitable giving. Gifts to qualifying UK-registered charities are completely exempt from inheritance tax — there is no limit on the amount. However, gifts to overseas charities require careful attention: they must meet HMRC’s conditions to qualify for the same reliefs, and not all foreign charities will qualify. It’s important to get specialist advice when making charitable gifts, particularly when establishing trusts or making substantial legacies in your will. The rules around the 36% reduced rate calculation can be complex, and errors in the will drafting can mean the relief is lost entirely.

Benefits of Charitable Giving in Estate Planning UK

Charitable giving in estate planning offers significant benefits for UK residents. It lets you access genuine tax reliefs while creating a lasting positive impact. Let’s look at the main advantages of incorporating charitable giving into your estate plan.

The most immediate benefit is inheritance tax relief. Gifts to qualifying charities are completely exempt from IHT — they’re taken off the top of your estate before the tax calculation even begins. If you leave at least 10% of your net estate to charity, the IHT rate on the taxable remainder drops from 40% to 36%. On a taxable estate worth £500,000 (above the nil rate band), that 4% saving amounts to £20,000 — money your family keeps instead of paying to HMRC.

Beyond the tax savings, charitable donations let you support causes you believe in and strengthen your overall legacy. UK giving remains strong: in recent years, the public has donated billions of pounds annually to charitable causes, and legacy gifts through wills have become one of the largest single sources of charity income.

  • Reduce your estate’s inheritance tax liability — potentially to zero on the charitable portion
  • Support causes and organisations you care deeply about
  • Create a meaningful, lasting legacy that reflects your values
  • Potentially increase the total value passing to your other beneficiaries through the 36% reduced rate

Establishing charitable trusts can provide additional flexibility and control over how your donations are distributed. A charitable trust can support multiple causes over many years, giving your philanthropy a structured, long-term impact. It’s wise to work with a specialist estate planning professional to ensure your charitable giving is structured correctly — getting the most from available reliefs while staying fully compliant with UK law.

By incorporating charitable donations into your estate plan, you support the causes you care about and can significantly reduce your tax liability. It’s one of the most effective ways to leave a positive mark on the world while also looking after your family.

Types of Charitable Contributions in Estate Planning

Estate planning gives you several ways to make charitable contributions. Here are the main options available to UK residents wanting to give back through their estate plans.

Monetary Donations and Cash Bequests

Cash legacies are the most straightforward way to leave a gift to charity in your will. You can specify a fixed amount (a pecuniary legacy) or a percentage of your residuary estate. Percentage gifts are particularly powerful because they grow with your estate’s value over time. During your lifetime, cash donations benefit from Gift Aid, which lets the charity reclaim basic rate tax — adding 25p for every £1 you donate at no extra cost to you.

For estates with a taxable value above the nil rate band of £325,000, leaving at least 10% of the net estate to charity can reduce the IHT rate from 40% to 36% on the remaining taxable estate — a benefit worth careful calculation.

Property and Asset Contributions

Donating property or valuable assets to charity can create a significant legacy. This might include land, buildings, artwork, antiques, or other valuable items. Such gifts are exempt from IHT, and where assets have risen in value, donating them to charity can also avoid a capital gains tax charge that would otherwise arise on a sale. This makes property and asset gifts particularly tax-efficient for estates holding appreciated assets.

Stocks and Securities Donations

Gifting shares or securities to charity is one of the most tax-efficient ways to give. You receive income tax relief on the market value of the shares donated, and neither you nor the charity pays capital gains tax on the transfer. For higher and additional rate taxpayers, this effectively reduces the net cost of the gift significantly. The charity receives the full value of the shares without any tax deduction — a genuine win for both sides.

Understanding these options helps you make informed choices about charitable giving in your estate plan. Whether it’s cash, property, or shares, there are multiple ways to support your chosen causes while managing your overall tax position effectively.

Charitable Trusts and Their Role in Estate Planning

Charitable trusts play an important role in UK estate planning. They allow you to direct wealth to charitable purposes in a structured, tax-efficient way, with ongoing control over how funds are distributed.

In the UK, the main types of charitable trust relevant to estate planning are charitable trusts established during your lifetime and those created by your will. A charitable trust can be set up to support a specific charity, a category of charities, or general charitable purposes. Unlike discretionary family trusts, genuine charitable trusts benefit from significant tax exemptions — they are exempt from income tax, capital gains tax, and inheritance tax on the assets held within them.

Incorporating charitable trusts into your estate plan can deliver substantial benefits. The assets you transfer to a qualifying charitable trust are exempt from IHT, removing them from your taxable estate. During your lifetime, donations into charitable trusts can qualify for income tax relief, and Gift Aid can boost the value of cash contributions by 25%.

Donor-advised funds (DAFs) are growing in popularity in the UK as a flexible alternative to setting up your own charitable trust. With a DAF, you make an irrevocable donation to the fund, receive tax relief immediately, and then recommend grants to your chosen charities over time. DAFs are simpler to administer than a standalone trust and are well-suited to families who want flexibility in directing their giving without the administrative burden of running a trust.

  • Assets in charitable trusts are exempt from inheritance tax
  • Donations of appreciated assets (such as shares or property) to charitable trusts avoid capital gains tax
  • Family members can be appointed as trustees, continuing the family’s charitable legacy across generations
  • Charitable trusts give you control over how and when donations reach your chosen causes

When considering charitable trusts for your estate plan, specialist advice is essential. An experienced estate planning professional or solicitor can help you structure the trust correctly, ensure it qualifies for the available tax reliefs, and complies with Charity Commission requirements. Getting the structure right at the outset makes all the difference.

Tax Advantages of Charitable Giving in Estate Planning

Three rule changes you may need to consider (2026/27)

1. Pensions become subject to IHT from 6 April 2027. Most unused defined-contribution pension pots currently sit outside the estate for IHT — that ends on 6 April 2027 (gov.uk policy paper). HMRC estimates around 10,500 estates will face IHT for the first time as a result.

2. Business and agricultural property reliefs capped at £2.5m per person from 6 April 2026. Above the cap, only 50% relief applies — effective IHT of 20%. AIM shares dropped to 50% relief and do not use the £2.5m allowance (Saffery — APR/BPR reforms).

3. The NRB, RNRB and £2m taper threshold are frozen until 5 April 2031 following the 2024 and 2025 Budgets (gov.uk — NRB and RNRB freeze). With inflation, more estates will be pulled into IHT each year — a process commonly called “fiscal drag.”

Charitable giving in estate planning under UK law brings genuine, substantial tax advantages. Let’s look at how these reliefs work in practice and how they can reduce your family’s overall tax burden.

Inheritance Tax Relief and Charitable Donations

In the UK, inheritance tax applies at 40% on the value of your estate above the nil rate band of £325,000 per person (plus the residence nil rate band of £175,000 (gov.uk — RNRB) if a qualifying home passes to direct descendants). Gifts to qualifying charities are completely exempt from IHT — they are deducted from the estate before tax is calculated. If you leave at least 10% of your net estate to charity, the IHT rate on the remaining taxable estate is reduced from 40% to 36%. This reduced rate can produce significant savings — and in some cases, leaving more to charity actually results in your family receiving more overall, because the tax rate drops on the entire taxable portion.

Income Tax Benefits for Lifetime Giving

Gift Aid is one of the most valuable tax incentives for UK donors. When you make a Gift Aid declaration, the charity can reclaim basic rate tax on your donation — effectively adding 25p to every £1 you give. If you’re a higher rate (40%) or additional rate (45%) taxpayer, you can claim back the difference between the higher rate and basic rate through your self-assessment tax return. This means a £1,000 donation effectively costs a higher rate taxpayer just £600 after all the relief is claimed.

Capital Gains Tax Considerations

Donating assets that have increased in value — such as shares, property, or land — to a qualifying charity means you pay no capital gains tax on the gain. This is particularly valuable for assets with large unrealised gains, where selling the asset would trigger a significant CGT bill. By donating the asset directly, the full value goes to the charity, you receive income tax relief on the market value donated, and the CGT liability disappears entirely. For those with appreciated investment portfolios, this can be one of the most tax-efficient forms of giving available.

It’s important to review your charitable giving strategy regularly with a specialist estate planning professional. Tax rules and thresholds change — the nil rate band has been frozen at £325,000 since 2009 and is confirmed frozen until at least April 2031. Regular reviews ensure your plan stays effective and aligned with both your goals and the current tax landscape.

Conclusion

Charitable giving within your estate plan is one of the most powerful tools available under UK law — delivering genuine tax savings while creating a legacy that reflects your deepest values. We’ve seen how gifts to charity are completely exempt from inheritance tax, how the 36% reduced rate can save your family thousands of pounds, and how lifetime giving through Gift Aid and asset donations provides immediate tax relief. Inheritance tax planning that incorporates charitable donations is a smart, proven strategy for managing your estate effectively.

The options are varied and flexible. Cash legacies in your will, donations of shares or property, donor-advised funds, and charitable trusts all offer different benefits depending on your circumstances. Whether you want to support a single cause close to your heart or spread your giving across multiple organisations over many years, there’s a structure that fits.

For families who want to involve the next generation, charitable trusts allow family members to serve as trustees — making decisions about grants and building a culture of giving that endures across generations. This isn’t just about reducing a tax bill; it’s about teaching your children and grandchildren the value of generosity and stewardship.

As we’ve explored throughout this article, charitable giving in estate planning goes far beyond tax efficiency. It’s about making a real difference that aligns with your values — while ensuring your family is looked after too. Getting specialist advice is essential to structure your giving correctly and make the most of the reliefs available. Schedule a consultation with us today to explore how charitable giving can become a cornerstone of your estate plan.

Planned Giving Vehicles Beyond Simple Bequests

A straightforward cash bequest is often the first charitable giving mechanism people consider, but UK residents typically have access to a broader range of planned giving structures that may better suit their financial circumstances, family objectives, and philanthropic goals. Understanding which vehicle is appropriate generally requires careful consideration alongside a regulated financial adviser or solicitor.

Donor-Advised Funds

A donor-advised fund (DAF) allows an individual to make an irrevocable contribution to a sponsoring charity during their lifetime, receive immediate tax relief, and then recommend grants to qualifying charities over time. In our experience, DAFs can be particularly useful where a client wishes to consolidate charitable intentions without establishing a standalone trust. Contributions may qualify for Gift Aid, meaning the sponsoring charity can reclaim 25p for every £1 donated by a UK taxpayer, effectively enhancing the value of each donation at no additional cost to the donor. HMRC’s guidance on Gift Aid is available at gov.uk: Claim Gift Aid.

Charitable Remainder Trusts and Charitable Lead Trusts

In a UK estate planning context, these two structures serve broadly opposite purposes and are worth distinguishing clearly. A charitable remainder trust generally allows a donor or named beneficiary to receive an income stream for a fixed term or for life, with the remaining capital passing to a nominated charity on termination. This may reduce the value of the estate for inheritance tax purposes while preserving a degree of financial security for the donor. A charitable lead trust, by contrast, typically directs income to a charity for a defined period first, after which the residual assets pass to non-charitable beneficiaries such as children or grandchildren. Both structures are more complex to establish than a simple bequest and will ordinarily require specialist legal advice. It is also worth noting that the UK does not have a direct statutory equivalent to the US charitable remainder trust, so similar outcomes are generally achieved through carefully drafted discretionary or life interest trusts combined with charitable beneficiary designations.

Endowments and Legacies in Practice

An endowed gift involves leaving a sum of capital to a charity with the intention that only the investment returns are spent, preserving the principal in perpetuity. Many universities, hospices, and arts organisations in England and Wales actively encourage endowment bequests. For estates where the net value exceeds the current nil-rate band threshold of £325,000 — frozen at that level until at least 2028 — leaving a qualifying charitable legacy of 10% or more of the net estate can reduce the inheritance tax rate from the standard 40% to 36%. To illustrate: on a net taxable estate of £500,000, IHT at 40% would ordinarily produce a liability of £70,000 on the £175,000 above the nil-rate band. If the deceased left £50,000 (approximately 10% of the net estate) to a qualifying charity, the remaining taxable estate falls to £125,000, and the reduced rate of 36% applies, producing a liability of £45,000 — a potential saving of £25,000 compared with the standard rate scenario. The precise calculation is sensitive to individual circumstances and our team would always recommend confirming figures with a qualified adviser. HMRC’s technical guidance on this relief is set out in the Inheritance Tax Manual at IHTM45000.

Common Questions About Charitable Giving in Estate Planning

What is charitable giving in estate planning?

Charitable giving in estate planning refers to the deliberate inclusion of donations to qualifying charities as part of an individual’s arrangements for passing on their wealth. This may take the form of a cash bequest in a will, the transfer of property or investments, a gift made during lifetime, or a more structured vehicle such as a charitable trust. Beyond the philanthropic dimension, such gifts may carry meaningful tax advantages, including inheritance tax relief and income tax benefits through Gift Aid. In our experience, integrating charitable intentions early in the estate planning process generally produces better outcomes than adding them as an afterthought.

What are the 4 P’s of philanthropy?

The 4 P’s of philanthropy is a framework sometimes used by advisers and charities to help donors structure their giving. They typically refer to Purpose (identifying the cause or impact the donor wishes to support), People (understanding who will benefit and how), Plan (selecting the appropriate giving vehicle and timeline), and Proof (measuring or evidencing the impact of the donation over time). While this model originates largely from the professional fundraising sector, it can be a useful starting point for families considering significant charitable commitments within an estate plan, helping to align financial decisions with personal values before any legal structures are put in place.

What is the gift acceptance policy for churches?

A gift acceptance policy is a formal document adopted by a charitable organisation — including churches and faith communities — that sets out which types of gifts it is willing to receive, any conditions attached to acceptance, and how conflicts of interest will be managed. Churches registered as charities in England and Wales are subject to Charity Commission guidance and are generally encouraged to have a written policy covering cash, property, shares, and more complex assets such as business interests. If you intend to leave a gift to a church in your will, it is advisable to confirm the organisation’s gift acceptance policy in advance, as some smaller congregations may have restrictions on the types of asset they can readily administer.

How does the 10% charitable legacy rule work in practice?

Where 10% or more of the net estate is left to a qualifying charity, HMRC applies a reduced inheritance tax rate of 36% rather than the standard 40% to the remainder of the taxable estate. The net estate for this purpose is calculated after deducting the nil-rate band (currently £325,000, frozen until at least 2028), any transferable nil-rate band, and liabilities. The relief can result in a situation where the cost to the estate of making a charitable gift is partially or wholly offset by the tax saving generated, meaning beneficiaries may receive a similar or even larger net inheritance than they would have done without the charitable bequest. Our team would always recommend modelling this calculation carefully with a qualified adviser, as the benefit varies significantly depending on the size and composition of the estate.

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