Another worrying sign Australia is creeping towards a brutal UK-style inheritance tax. Heres what YOU can do to keep Albos hands off your estate

Ask for the name of the UKs most despised tax and youre likely to receive the answer: inheritance tax.

Ask for the name of the UKs most despised tax and youre likely to receive the answer: inheritance tax. After a lifetime of paying tax on your income, land, property and shares, the dreaded inheritance tax means the government squeezes your estate once again when you die.

Unlike the UK, Australians have long rejected the idea as morbid.

But in a shocking move last month, Australias leading financial and business publication, the AFR, used its pre-Budget editorial to call for genuine tax reform to make everyone better off overall and suggested a modest inheritance tax to help lower the tax burden of younger generations.

The newspapers alarming decision to support a death tax would no doubt have gone down like a lead balloon with its readers, as noted by The Australians Media Diary.

But the papers radical rethink of inheritance tax in Australia cant simply be dismissed out of hand. It could become a reality... thanks to the Greens.

Angry young Australians who are locked out of the property market are increasingly supporting the Greens which campaigns on wealth inequality and demands radical wealth redistribution

If Labor wins the forthcoming election, it could well be forced to rely on the left-wing party to form a minority government.

In the event of a Labor/Greens coalition, Australia could face its first federal inheritance tax since it was abolished in 1979.

Australians with investment properties and shares could soon be paying a hefty inheritance tax on their estate when they die - if the landlord-loathing Greens force Labors hand

Australians with investment properties and shares could soon be paying a hefty inheritance tax on their estate when they die - if the landlord-loathing Greens force Labors hand

Should Labor win the next election and be forced to rely on the Greens to form a minority government, a UK-style inheritance tax is a distinct possibility

Should Labor win the next election and be forced to rely on the Greens to form a minority government, a UK-style inheritance tax is a distinct possibility

This would mean Australians with investment properties or a share portfolio could soon be paying a hefty inheritance tax on their estate when they die.

The Greens, which targets young renters and blame baby boomers for generational inequality, has an economic justice platform that advocates an inheritance tax, calling it a ‘tax on dynastic wealth, targeted at those bequeathing or gifting large amounts’.

Wealth inequality is fundamentally unjust and requires structural economic change and wealth redistribution, it says.

A spokesman for Greens senator Nick McKim, who holds the Economic Justice and Treasury portfolios, downplayed any suggestion the party was proposing an inheritance tax at the next election, saying it wasnt party policy.

The concept is even too toxic for the Greens - to admit publicly anyway.  

But should that change, and with the party likely to hold the balance of power next year, heres what it could mean for you:

How inheritance tax works in the UK

The UK has an inheritance tax on estates worth more than £325,000 (AU$634,000) – a threshold known as the ‘nil rate band’. Tax is charged on assets above this threshold at 40 per cent.

If you are married or in a civil partnership, all property and assets go to the surviving spouse free of inheritance tax provided the deceased has left a will naming them as its beneficiary. 

If someone dies intestate – without a will – then the first £322,000 of the estate goes to the surviving spouse. However, if the estate is larger than this, the spouse gets half of the rest tax-free, and the other half goes to the deceased’s children, if there are any, who may have to pay tax.

Angry young Australians who are locked out of the property market are increasingly supporting the Greens, led by Adam Bandt (second from left), who campaign on wealth inequality and demand radical wealth redistribution

Angry young Australians who are locked out of the property market are increasingly supporting the Greens, led by Adam Bandt (second from left), who campaign on wealth inequality and demand radical wealth redistribution

Children pay inheritance tax on their parents’ estates above £325,000, but also get an extra £175,000 tax free allowance per parent if the value of the estate lies in property - meaning they can inherit up to £1 million worth of property tax-free. This only applies if the total value of the estate is less than £2 million.

Research by the UKs House of Commons Library said that in the 2020-21 financial year, 3.73 per cent of deaths resulted in inheritance tax having to be paid, meaning the tax applied to 27,000 estates.

The UKs parliamentary library explained that the rich, whose estates incurred an inheritance tax, were more likely to own shares than those with assets under £1million (AU$1.95million).

Wealthier estates are more likely to have a higher proportion held in securities or other assets, it said.

Those with estates valued at less than £1million are more likely to be mostly composed of residential property and cash.

Australias experience 

Australia abolished inheritance taxes in July 1979, a year after Queenslands eccentric National Country Party premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen led the charge to get rid of death duties.

Liberal prime minister Malcolm Fraser scrapped the federal inheritance tax and all of the states followed. 

But a federal capital gains tax debuted in 1985, under Bob Hawkes Labor government, with an exemption on the family home. 

The last time Labor formed a minority government with the Greens, former Labor PM Julia Gillard was forced to introduce a carbon tax in 2011 - despite vowing not to do so during the 2010 election campaign.

In negotiating an agreement to provide Anthony Albaneses Labor with confidence and supply, Greens leader Adam Bandt could try that same trick again and force Labor to introduce an inheritance tax.

Should the Greens force Labor to introduce an inheritance tax, there are ways you can protect your estate from the taxman (stock image)

Should the Greens force Labor to introduce an inheritance tax, there are ways you can protect your estate from the taxman (stock image)

How to protect your familys wealth

Should the Greens force Labor to introduce an inheritance tax, there are ways you can protect your estate from the taxman.

The following strategies are commonly used in countries where inheritance tax is already in place.

However, it is important to remember tax laws vary between jurisdictions and what works in a European country, for example, may not necessarily apply in Australia.

  • Leave everything to your spouse in your will

In Britain and other countries, any assets passing between spouses and civil partners are generally exempt from inheritance tax, provided theres a will.

In the event of inheritance tax being introduced in Australia, a similar rule would likely apply. Therefore, by leaving assets solely to a spouse and not any descendants, you could avoid facing the tax until after the spouses death.

  • Early inheritance and gifting assets during your lifetime

Generally speaking, the smaller the size of your estate, the less tax is paid upon death.

So one easy way to pay less inheritance tax is to gift assets to heirs while you are still alive. This not only reduces the size of your estate, but allows a parent or grandparent to see their child or grandchild enjoy their gift.

Depending on how inheritance tax laws are structured, gifting assets a certain number of years before death might reduce the taxable estate - which means its a good idea to transfer the gift when you are in good health.

For example, the UK has a seven-year rule, which means if you die within seven years of gifting an asset (e.g. money, possessions, property) to a beneficiary, then the gift may still be subject to inheritance tax. But after seven years, the gift does not count towards the overall value of your estate.

  • Establishing Trusts

By placing assets in a discretionary trust, you can ensure they are managed for the benefit of your heirs without transferring direct ownership.

Depending on how an inheritance tax was structured in Australia, this could reduce or eliminate the tax burden.

Life interest trusts could be another option to avoid inheritance tax, as they allow a beneficiary to use your property after your death - either to live in or generate income - without full legal ownership.

This type of arrangement can be useful if you want to provide for someone immediately after your death, but ultimately wish for your property to be left to another person.

  • Get life insurance - but put the policy into trust

Taking out life insurance means your loved ones get a payout after your death. In the UK, this can count as part of your estate when you die - and if it crosses the nil rate band threshold then the 40 per cent inheritance tax applies.

However, the payout can be exempt from inheritance tax - but you have to set it up correctly, ideally with the help of a financial advisor.

To stop a life policy payment getting rolled into your estate, Britons put it into trust, which means the proceeds of the policy are paid directly to your appointed beneficiaries, rather than to your legal estate.

  • Take advantage of charity bequests

Many inheritance tax systems around the world allow for exemptions or reductions if a portion of the estate is left to charity. 

Donating part of your estate could reduce the overall taxable amount, with the added benefit of helping out a cause you care about.

  • Consider structuring ownership of assets

In countries with inheritance tax, holding assets in joint ownership can sometimes allow for a more tax-efficient transfer of assets.

The surviving co-owner might automatically inherit the property in its entirety without it contributing towards the nil rate band.

Any advice given is general only and not intended to influence readers financial decisions