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Inheritance tax for farmers to kick in at £2.5m in government U-turn – UK politics live | Politics

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Inheritance tax for farmers to kick in at £2.5m, not £1m as planned, in government U-turn to help farming community

The government has just announced a significant concession in its proposal to extend inheritance tax to farms.

The policy, originally announced in the budget last year, provoked a furious backlash from farmers, who said it would prevent many of them from being able to pass on their farms to their children. Under the plan, inheritance tax would have been due on the value of farms over £1m.

The new rules are due to come into force in April 2026, and at a Commons commitee hearing last week Keir Starmer conceded that he has been told of farmers with a terminal illness planning to kill themselves before that point to avoid the tax.

The government has today announced that the threshold will lifted from £1m to £2.5m.

In a new release, it says:

The government has today announced that the level of the agricultural and business property reliefs threshold will be increased from £1m to £2.5m when it is introduced in April 2026. This allows spouses or civil partners to pass on up to £5m in qualifying agricultural or business assets between them before paying inheritance tax, on top of existing allowances.

Following the reforms to agricultural and business property reliefs announced at budget 2024, the government has listened to concerns of the farming community and businesses about the reforms.

Having carefully considered this feedback, the government is going further to protect more farms and businesses, while maintaining the core principle that the most valuable agricultural and business assets should not receive unlimited relief. The change will be introduced to the Finance Bill in January and will apply from 6 April.

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NFU welcomes inheritance tax U-turn, saying it will be ‘huge relief’ to many farmers and ‘common sense has prevailed’

The National Farmers’ Union has welcomed today’s farm inheritance tax U-turn, saying that “common sense has prevailed” and that this will be a “huge relief to many”.

In a statement, the NFU president Tom Bradshaw said:

Changes to agriculture property relief (APR) and business property relief (BPR) announced in last year’s budget came as a huge shock to the farming community. Until that moment, the best tax planning advice was to hold on to your farm until death and pass it on to the next generation who could continue to run a viable farming, food producing business.

The original changes to APR and BPR, contained within the finance bill, resulted in a pernicious and cruel tax, trapping the most elderly and vulnerable people and their families in the eye of the storm. The NFU and its members have stood strong for what we believed in.

I am thankful common sense has prevailed and government has listened.

I have had two very constructive meetings with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and dozens of conversations with Defra Secretary of State Emma Reynolds. She has played a key role underlining the human impact of this tax.

These conversations have led to today’s changes which were so desperately needed.

From the start, the government said it was trying to protect the family farm and the change announced today brings this much closer to reality for many.

This statement is notable for the fact that Bradshaw is suggesting that Starmer and Reynolds led to the government changing its mind on the inheritance tax threshold. He does not mention Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, or Steve Reed, Reynolds’ predecessor as environment secretary, who were seen by the NFU as more implacable on this issue.

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