Pavilionaire
Well-known member
- Jul 7, 2003
- 31,278
Everyone aged 16 or over has an NI number.Umm, yes, I did it for 20 years The vast majority of people aren’t on self assessment. You think all those recipients of Aunt Maude’s cash would declare their inheritances ? To prevent that, you’d need a reporting process at point of distribution and then an audit process to ensure all the distributions had been captured - and HMRC are already drowning. It would be a colossal admin overhead.
If at the point of grant at probate it was reported electronically to HMRC the net estate together with NI number of beneficiaries and their share of estate then HMRC would know even before the assets had been conveyed as to who has got what.
HMRC could then target recipients of assets.
So many people inherit property that they either sell but don't report, or let out but don't tell HMRC about. Yes, HMRC have access to Land Registry records but are playing catch-up, particularly when people may have already spent the proceeds.
HMRC need to sort this problem out, because the cost of labour / systems are far outweighed by the lost tax revenue.