Many people choose to use equity release to gift money to children or grandchildren. It’s a way of helping family now rather than waiting until later in life, and it often feels more meaningful to see the difference that support can make. But gifting does raise an important question: how does it affect inheritance tax, and what exactly is the seven-year rule?
Understanding the rules around gifting, the inheritance tax threshold, and how gifts count towards your estate can help you make confident decisions that suit your individual circumstances.
What the seven-year rule actually means
The seven-year rule is part of inheritance tax planning. It applies to gifts you make during your lifetime, including money released through equity release, and determines whether those gifts remain potentially exempt transfers (PETs) or become chargeable later.
In simple terms, if you make a gift and live for seven years, that gift usually becomes inheritance tax free. If you die within seven years, the value of the gift may still count towards your estate, and there may be inheritance tax to pay depending on the size of your estate and whether you’ve used your nil rate band.
This is where taper relief comes in. It reduces the potential tax bill on gifts made between three and seven years before death, using a sliding scale that gradually lowers the amount of inheritance tax owed.
Understanding inheritance tax thresholds
Inheritance tax only becomes relevant if the total value of your estate including any gifts that fall back into it exceeds the available inheritance tax thresholds. These thresholds are known as the nil rate band and the residence nil rate band, and together they determine how much of your estate can pass on tax-free.
The nil rate band is the standard inheritance tax allowance. Currently set at £325,000, every individual has a tax-free threshold, and anything within this band is charged at 0% inheritance tax. Only the value above this threshold may be taxed at the standard 40% rate.
Many people also benefit from the residence nil‑rate band, an additional allowance of up to £175,000 that applies when you leave your main home to direct descendants such as children or grandchildren. When combined with the standard nil‑rate band, this can this means a couple can potentially pass on up to £1 million without inheritance tax
These thresholds matter when gifting because any gifts that don’t qualify as exempt for example, larger gifts made within seven years of death may be added back into your estate when calculating whether inheritance tax is due. If the total value of your estate, plus any chargeable gifts, stays within your available thresholds, there may be no inheritance tax to pay at all.
Understanding how these allowances work helps you see the bigger picture: the seven-year rule isn’t just about timing, it’s about how gifts interact with your overall estate and the tax-free allowances available to you.
How gifting works when it’s funded by equity release
When you release money from your home and choose to gift it, the money itself is not subject to income tax or capital gains tax at the point of making the gift. The gift leaves your estate immediately, and the seven-year clock starts from that moment. Meanwhile, the equity release loan, along with any interest that builds up, is repaid later from the sale of your property, which also reduces the value of your estate.
This means gifting through equity release can reduce the inheritance tax your beneficiaries may eventually pay, but only if the gift qualifies as a potentially exempt transfer and you live long enough for it to fall outside the seven-year window.
Do smaller gifts incur tax fees?
Smaller gifts are treated very differently from larger one-off amounts, and in many cases, they don’t fall under the seven-year rule at all. HMRC allows you to make certain gifts each tax year that are immediately exempt from inheritance tax, which means they don’t count towards your estate and won’t create a tax bill later.
The most common of these is your annual exemption. Each tax year, you can give away up to £3,000 to one person or split it between several people. If you didn’t use your allowance in the previous year, you may be able to carry forward unused annual exemption, which can be helpful if you’re supporting more than one family member.
There are also gifts that fall under what HMRC calls normal expenditure out of income. These are regular payments, for example, helping a child with rent, contributing to a grandchild’s savings, or supporting an elderly relative, provided they come from your normal income and don’t affect your standard of living. When these conditions are met, the gifts are immediately exempt and don’t trigger the seven-year rule.
The key point is that smaller, routine gifts can be a simple way to support loved ones without affecting your inheritance tax position. The only time they may become taxable is if you make several gifts in one tax year that, together, exceed your available exemptions. In that case, anything above the allowance may be treated as a potentially exempt transfer, meaning it could count towards your estate if you die within seven years.
This is why keeping track of what you give and when can make things much clearer for your beneficiaries later on.
Understanding taper relief without the jargon
Taper relief only applies if the total value of gifts made in one tax year exceeds the inheritance tax threshold. If you die within three years of making the gift, the full inheritance tax rate may apply. After that, the potential tax reduces year by year until it disappears completely at the seven-year mark.
It’s simply a way of recognising that gifts made earlier in life should have less impact on inheritance tax than those made shortly before death. How taper relief applies will depend on your individual circumstances, so personalised advice is important.
An example of taper relief in action
To see how taper relief works in real life, imagine you gift £100,000 to a family member using money released from your home. Because this is larger than your annual exemption, it becomes a potentially exempt transfer. Whether there is any inheritance tax to pay depends on how long you live after making the gift and the overall value of your estate.
Let’s assume your estate is large enough that the value of the gift would count towards your inheritance tax threshold if you were to die within seven years.
Here’s how the sliding scale works:
If you die within 0–3 years of making the gift, the full 40% inheritance tax rate may apply. In this example, the tax bill on the £100,000 gift could be £40,000.
If you die between 3 and 4 years, taper relief reduces the tax to 32%, meaning the inheritance tax to pay on the gift falls to £32,000.
Between 4 and 5 years, the rate drops to 24%, reducing the tax to £24,000.
Between 5 and 6 years, the rate falls again to 16%, so the tax becomes £16,000.
Between 6 and 7 years, the rate is 8%, meaning the tax due would be £8,000.
If you live for over seven years, the gift becomes inheritance tax free, and there is no tax to pay at all.
This example shows how taper relief gradually reduces the potential tax bill on larger gifts made within the seven-year period. It also highlights why record keeping matters knowing exactly when the gift was made helps your beneficiaries understand whether it will count towards your estate and how much inheritance tax may apply
Annual exemptions and regular gifts
Not all gifts fall under the seven-year rule. Some are immediately exempt, such as:
Your annual exemption, which allows you to gift up to a set amount each tax year
Unused annual exemption from the previous year, which can sometimes be carried forward
Regular gifts made from normal income, provided they don’t reduce your standard of living
These smaller gifts don’t count towards your estate and don’t trigger the seven-year rule at all. They can be helpful for supporting family members for example, small regular payments to children or grandchildren without affecting your inheritance tax position.
Why people choose to gift through equity release
For many homeowners, gifting is about timing. You may want to help a family member with a house deposit, support an elderly relative, or pass on money while you’re still able to enjoy seeing the benefit. Others simply prefer the idea of reducing the value of their estate now rather than leaving everything to be dealt with later.
Equity release can make this possible, but it’s important to understand how the value of the gift, the seven-year rule, and your estate all interact.
How gifting fits into the wider tax picture
When you’re thinking about gifting, it helps to understand how equity release interacts with tax more broadly not just inheritance tax, but also how the loan affects the value of your estate, how assets are treated, and what happens if you die within seven years of making the gift.
If you’d like a clearer picture of how equity release interacts with tax overall, our guide on equity release and inheritance tax explains why the money you release is not subject to income tax or capital gains tax and how it may influence your estate over time.
Record keeping and why it matters
Good record keeping can make a real difference. Keeping notes about when gifts were made, who they were made to, and whether they were part of your normal income can help your beneficiaries later. It also helps advisers understand how gifts count towards your estate and whether they qualify as exempt.
This is especially important if you make several gifts to the same person, or if you’re using a combination of annual exemptions, regular gifts, and larger potentially exempt transfers.
What to think about before making a gift
Before gifting money, it’s worth taking a moment to consider your own long-term needs. Equity release is designed to give you flexibility, but interest does build up over time unless you choose to make repayments. It’s also important to think about how the gift affects your estate, how the seven-year rule applies to your situation, and whether your beneficiaries understand the implications.
These are the kinds of conversations your adviser will guide you through, making sure everything is clear and aligned with your goals.
Why personalised advice matters
Gifting, inheritance tax and equity release all depend on your personal circumstances your estate value, your family situation, your financial plans and even your health. That’s why independent advice is essential. At Bower Wealth, our advisers can help you understand whether gifting is the right approach, how the seven-year rule affects you, and what alternatives might be worth considering, such as using a discretionary trust or making gifts from normal income.
You’ll also receive independent legal advice before proceeding.
The bottom line
The seven-year rule is straightforward once you break it down. Gifts become inheritance tax free after seven years, and taper relief gradually reduces the potential tax during that period. Gifting through equity release can reduce the size of your estate and help your family sooner, but it’s important to consider the long-term impact and get the right advice.
Important: Equity release will reduce the value of your estate and may affect your entitlement to means-tested benefits. The loan and any accrued
interest must be repaid, usually from the sale of your home. You should always seek independent financial advice before proceeding. If you’re thinking about gifting money from equity release, we’re here to help you explore your options with clarity and confidence.
