Unmarried Couples Inheritance Tax: How to Secure Your Love’s Future in 2026

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What is the unmarried couples inheritance tax? In the UK, the chance of couples getting married is expected to be less by 28% by 20250. Therefore, it is crucial to start looking at what really matters when it comes to people sharing their lives together without marriage.

Unlike married couples, unmarried partners do not get the same rights or benefits when it comes to inheritance tax. So, in today’s topic, we are going to cover this topic from various angles to help you secure your love’s future.

unmarried couples inheritance tax

Read our complete guide on contesting a will for lack of capacity.

Common-law marriage is by far the UK’S most dangerous misconception in 2026. Even if they live together for years, unmarried partners have no automatic legal status for Inheritance Tax (IHT). When a spouse dies, they can leave an unlimited tax-free amount to their survivor. For unmarried couples, unfortunately, the taxman treats you as legal strangers. This means that upon the first death, any assets passed to the surviving partner, including the family home, means an immediate 40% tax bill.

As of May 2026, the Nil-Rate Band (NRB) remains frozen at £325,000. With property prices having risen significantly since this threshold was set in 2009, more cohabiting couples are falling into the “IHT trap.”

For an unmarried couple owning a modest £600,000 home, the death of the first partner could result in a tax bill exceeding £100,000 simply to allow the survivor to keep living in their own home.

Unmarried couples can still access the £175,000 Residence Nil-Rate Band, but only if they leave their home to “direct descendants” (children or grandchildren).

  • The Catch: Unlike married couples, you cannot “roll over” your unused RNRB to your partner.
  • The Conflict: If you leave the house to your partner to ensure they have a roof over their head, you lose the RNRB. If you leave it to your children to save tax, your partner may be forced to move out.

The Catch: Unlike married couples, you cannot “roll over” your unused RNRB to your partner.

The Conflict: If you leave the house to your partner to ensure they have a roof over their head, you lose the RNRB. If you leave it to your children to save tax, your partner may be forced to move out.

How you own your property determines your tax liability.

  • Joint Tenants: The property passes automatically to the survivor. While this ensures housing security, it doesn’t stop the tax bill. The value of the deceased’s share is added to their estate, potentially pushing it over the £325,000 limit.
  • Tenants in Common: You own specific shares (e.g., 50/50). This allows for more flexible planning, such as leaving your share to a trust or your children while giving your partner a “right to reside.”

To solve the conflict between tax efficiency and partner security, many couples in 2026 use a Life Interest Trust in their Wills.

  • How it works: You leave your share of the house to your children (securing the RNRB) but grant your partner the legal right to live there for the rest of their life.
  • The Benefit: The partner is protected, the children eventually inherit the full value, and the tax burden is managed more effectively.

Unmarried couples should maximize “lifetime giving.” In 2026, you can give away up to £3,000 per year tax-free. Larger gifts are “Potentially Exempt Transfers” (PETs). If you survive for seven years after making the gift, it falls outside your estate for tax purposes. This is a vital tool for shifting wealth to a partner or children before health declines.

A common mistake is taking out a life insurance policy to cover a potential tax bill but failing to write it “in trust.” If the policy is not in trust, the payout is added to your estate, actually increasing the tax bill. By placing it in trust, the money goes directly to your partner tax-free, providing them with the cash needed to pay HMRC without selling assets.

In 2026, most pension pots remain outside of the estate for IHT purposes. Unmarried couples should ensure their “Expression of Wish” forms are up to date with their pension provider. Leaving a pension to a partner is often the most tax-efficient way to provide for them, as it usually bypasses the 40% IHT charge entirely.

If one partner owns a business or farm, Business Property Relief (BPR) or Agricultural Property Relief (APR) can offer up to 100% relief from IHT. However, following the 2025 Autumn Budget, new caps apply from April 2026. Unmarried couples must audit these assets carefully to ensure they don’t lose these protections upon a transfer between partners.

The average IHT bill for a non-married cohabiting couple in 2026 is estimated to be £45,000 higher than for a married couple with identical assets. Professional estate planning isn’t just about “dodging tax”—it’s about ensuring the surviving partner isn’t left in financial ruin during their time of grief.

If you leave at least 10% of your net estate to a registered charity, the IHT rate on the rest of your taxable assets drops from 40% to 36%. For high-value estates, this can be a mathematically sound way to support a cause while slightly reducing the overall tax burden for your partner or family.

Without a Will, the Rules of Intestacy apply. In 2026, these rules still do not provide for unmarried partners. If you die without a Will, your partner gets nothing, and your estate goes to your children, parents, or siblings. This often forces the surviving partner to sue the estate under the Inheritance Act 1975—a costly and heartbreaking process.

While many couples choose not to marry for personal reasons, entering into a Civil Partnership provides the exact same IHT benefits as marriage. In 2026, this remains the single most effective “tax planning” move an unmarried couple can make, instantly unlocking the spouse exemption and transferable nil-rate bands.

Contesting a will could become an overwhelming experience if not accompanied by expert guidance and support. Our mission is to provide you with all the needed information, support, and authority to get through this journey, with only one goal in mind: Fairness.

To our team, this process is not about winning; it’s about claiming what was yours from the beginning.

Get your free, no-obligation case assessment. Call 08002980029 or visit contestawilltoday.com

No. HMRC does not recognize “common-law marriage.” Whether you have been together for two years or fifty, the tax rules for unmarried couples are identical.

No. Transferable Nil-Rate Bands are strictly reserved for married couples and civil partners. If your partner dies and leaves everything to you, their £325,000 allowance is “lost” unless they left assets to other beneficiaries.

Only the portion of the estate (including the home) that exceeds your £325,000 allowance is taxed at 40%. If you leave the home to your children, you may get an additional £175,000 allowance (RNRB).

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Frequently asked questions.

Can A Will Be Contested?

Yes, a will can be contested if there are valid legal grounds to challenge its validity.

There are several types of trusts used in estate planning, each serving a different purpose depending on your goals.

  • Breach of Trust: Mismanagement of assets by the trustee.

  • Trustee Removal: Conflicts leading to the removal of a trustee.

  • Interpretation: Disagreements over the trust’s legal wording.

  • Undue Influence: Pressure on the creator to change trust terms.

  • Financial Claims: Beneficiaries claiming they haven’t received their fair share.

Contesting a Will:

  • This specifically refers to challenging the validity of the will itself.

  • Common grounds include claims that the deceased lacked mental capacity, the will was forged, or they were under “undue influence” when signing it.

Contentious Probate:

  • This is a broader term that covers any dispute arising after someone’s death during the administration of the estate.

No, you do not always have to go to court. Most probate disputes are resolved through:

  • Mediation: A professional mediator helps both sides reach an agreement without a judge.

  • Negotiation: Solicitors from both sides negotiate a fair settlement privately.

  • Settlement Agreements: A legal contract is signed to end the dispute outside of court.

  • Court as a Last Resort: Litigation is only used if all other attempts to settle fail.

 

 

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