Skip to main content
Post-death estate planning

Deed of variation — UK post-death IHT planning

A deed of variation is a legal document signed by a beneficiary of a will (or intestacy) that effectively rewrites part of the inheritance they're entitled to, with the change treated for tax purposes as if the deceased had made it themselves. It's a powerful but underused tool. Worth understanding because the window to use one is just two years from the date of death.

Educational only. Deeds of variation are technical legal documents with specific rules. Always involve a solicitor for anything beyond the simplest case. Not legal advice.

What a deed of variation does

A deed of variation (sometimes called "instrument of variation") is a legal document by which a beneficiary of a will or intestacy says, in effect: "I would prefer my inheritance to go to someone else (or to a charity, or into a trust)." If the deed meets specific rules, HMRC treats the redirected gift as if the deceased had made it directly — with the tax consequences calculated on that basis.

Key requirements (from Inheritance Tax Act 1984 section 142 + TCGA section 62):

If those conditions are met, the gift is treated as if the deceased had written it that way in their original will.

Why this matters — the IHT consequence

The crucial point is that the variation is treated as the deceased's gift, not the beneficiary's. This has two big implications:

1. The 7-year IHT clock doesn't restart

If a beneficiary inherits and then voluntarily gives the asset away, the gift starts a fresh 7-year clock from the date of the new gift. The beneficiary has to live another 7 years for the gift to be outside their estate for IHT.

If a beneficiary varies the inheritance via a deed of variation, the gift is treated as coming from the DECEASED. No new 7-year clock. The asset is simply removed from the deceased's estate as if it had never gone to the beneficiary.

2. No "gift with reservation of benefit" issues

If a beneficiary "gives" an asset but continues to use it (e.g. keeps living in the house they "gave" to children), that's a Gift With Reservation of Benefit (GROB) — treated as still in their estate. With a deed of variation, the beneficiary never received the asset in the first place, so GROB doesn't apply.

Common use cases for deeds of variation

1. Skip a generation

The deceased's will leaves £200,000 to their adult son. The son is comfortably off financially and has IHT exposure of his own. He uses a deed of variation to redirect the £200,000 to his children (the deceased's grandchildren). The gift is treated as if the deceased had left it to the grandchildren directly:

This is probably the single most common use of deeds of variation.

2. Add a charity legacy to qualify for the 36% IHT rate

If 10% or more of the "baseline amount" (net estate above NRB) goes to charity, the IHT rate on the rest drops from 40% to 36%. A family that didn't structure this in the will can add it retroactively:

This makes charitable bequests genuinely tax-efficient for IHT-liable estates. The family is worse off by less than the charity is better off.

3. Redress an outdated or unfair will

The deceased's will doesn't reflect their later wishes (perhaps not updated for years). Beneficiaries who feel the will is unfair can voluntarily vary it to better reflect what they believe the deceased would have wanted — with the variation treated as if the deceased made it.

Example: an older will leaves everything to one child; another child has been excluded. The included child voluntarily varies the will to share equally with the excluded sibling. The IHT consequences are calculated as if the deceased had split it equally.

4. Provide for an unprovided-for spouse / partner

The deceased's will (written before marriage or before a new partnership) doesn't provide for the surviving spouse / partner. A deed of variation can redirect inheritance from the original beneficiaries (e.g. adult children) to the surviving spouse.

If the variation includes assets transferred to a spouse, the gift becomes a fully exempt spousal transfer for IHT — potentially saving 40% of the redirected amount.

5. Set up a trust retroactively

The will leaves cash to minor grandchildren absolutely. Beneficiaries (or possibly the executors) can vary the gift to be held in trust until age 25, providing protection against teenage spending.

The trust is treated as if the deceased had set it up; for trusts in wills, IHT rules favour the deceased-set-up status.

6. Fix IHT mistakes in the will

The deceased's will didn't optimise IHT (e.g. didn't preserve the RNRB by leaving the home to direct descendants, or missed using the spousal exemption). A deed of variation can retroactively optimise.

Who needs to sign

The deed must be signed by every beneficiary who is giving up an entitlement under the variation. Specifically:

The executors of the will don't need to sign (their role is administrative, not beneficial), unless they're also beneficiaries.

What deeds of variation can't do

The practical process

  1. Identify the desired changes within the family / among beneficiaries. Agree what should be varied and who gets what instead.
  2. Engage a solicitor (typically the same firm that handled probate, though it doesn't have to be). Cost: usually £300-£1,500 depending on complexity.
  3. Draft the deed. The deed must explicitly state which gifts are being varied, who receives the redirected gift, and that the variation is to be treated as the deceased's gift for IHT and/or CGT purposes.
  4. All affected beneficiaries sign. Witness signatures required.
  5. Notify HMRC: send a copy of the deed to HMRC if the variation changes the IHT bill (typically required for variations affecting tax). This is done via the executors / through Form IHT200 / IHT400 amendments.
  6. Implement the redirected gifts: the executors then distribute according to the varied terms, not the original will.

Costs and timing

Worked example: skip-generation deed of variation

Sarah dies leaving a net estate of £800,000. Her will leaves everything to her son David (no other beneficiaries, single child). Her estate exceeds the IHT thresholds:

David is 55, has his own estate of £1.2m and significant IHT exposure already. He doesn't need Sarah's full inheritance. He executes a deed of variation redirecting £400,000 to his two children (Sarah's grandchildren), Emma (18) and Tom (22).

Outcome:

Worked example: charitable variation to access the 36% IHT rate

James dies with net estate of £1,000,000. His will leaves everything to his sister Mary. IHT exposure:

The "baseline amount" for the 36% rate test: £675,000. 10% of that = £67,500.

Mary executes a deed of variation redirecting £67,500 to a registered charity. Now:

Compare: without the variation, Mary would have received £730,000. After the variation, she receives £713,800 — she's worse off by £16,200. But the charity receives £67,500. Net benefit to "Mary + charity" combined: £51,300 (the IHT saving of £51,300 was diverted to charity instead of HMRC).

Watch-outs

Frequently asked questions

Can I do a deed of variation if the deceased didn't have a will?

Yes. Variations of intestacy work the same way: the people entitled under intestacy can agree to redirect their entitlements, with the redirected gifts treated as if the deceased had willed it that way. Useful when intestacy outcomes don't reflect what the family wants.

Does the deed need HMRC approval?

No formal approval. The deed must contain specific statutory wording (about treating the variation as the deceased's gift) and meet the legal requirements. HMRC accepts the deed if it meets these conditions. Sending a copy to HMRC alongside the IHT return is good practice for variations affecting tax.

What if a beneficiary wants to vary but other beneficiaries don't agree?

A deed of variation requires all affected parties' consent. If others refuse, the beneficiary can simply make a gift personally (with 7-year clock and potential GROB issues) but it's not a deed of variation. Family discussion is essential.

Can the executor refuse to implement a deed of variation?

No — the variation is between beneficiaries; the executors must implement the varied distribution. But executors will want to see the deed before paying out differently from the will.

Can multiple deeds of variation be made?

Yes, but each variation must meet the conditions. Multiple variations on the same gift are unusual but possible. The cumulative effect must still be within the 2-year deadline.

What about deeds of variation for the 2027 pension IHT reform?

The 2027 reform brings unused DC pension funds into IHT scope. Deeds of variation will become more relevant for redistributing pension benefits between beneficiaries to optimise IHT after that date. Specialist advice essential for any pension-relevant variation.

Editorial accountability
Open Trust Centre →

Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.

Editorial standards Editorial process Corrections policy How we make money Editorial team Methodology
Cookie settings