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IHT · Transferable NRB · 2026/27

IHT transferable nil-rate band (2026/27)

The nil-rate band (£325,000) and residence nil-rate band (£175,000) are both transferable between spouses and civil partners. Any unused portion on the first death rolls forward to the survivor. A couple where the first spouse leaves everything to the survivor can pass up to £1m IHT-free on the second death, if the residence passes to direct descendants. This page covers the claim mechanics and timing.

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Transferable NRB in one paragraph: when the first spouse or civil partner dies, the unused portion of their nil-rate band (£325,000) and residence nil-rate band (£175,000) can be claimed by the second spouse's estate on their death. Net effect for a couple where the first death involves a full spouse-to-spouse transfer: the survivor's estate has up to £650,000 of NRB + £350,000 of RNRB = £1m IHT-free if the home passes to direct descendants. The transfer is by percentage, not by frozen pound amount.

How the transfer works

On the first death:

  1. Calculate the value of the first spouse's estate.
  2. Identify gifts and bequests that use the nil-rate band (bequests to non-spouse beneficiaries).
  3. Calculate the percentage of NRB unused (could be 0% if the entire NRB was consumed; 100% if everything passed to the surviving spouse).

On the second death:

  1. The percentage of unused NRB from the first death is applied to the current NRB threshold — so if the NRB has been increased since the first death (it hasn't since 2009 but conceptually could), the transfer scales up.
  2. The second spouse's estate uses their own NRB plus the transferred percentage.
  3. Maximum: 100% transferred NRB, giving the surviving spouse's estate effectively 200% of the current NRB.

Same mechanism applies to the RNRB (£175,000) separately.

Worked example 1: simple spouse-everything-to-spouse

Mr A dies in 2010 with an estate of £400,000. Everything passes to his wife under spouse exemption. Used NRB on first death: £0 (spouse exemption doesn't use the NRB). Percentage unused: 100%.

Mrs A dies in 2026/27 with an estate of £900,000.

Worked example 2: partial use on first death

Mr B dies in 2015 with an estate of £450,000. He leaves £200,000 to his son and £250,000 to his wife. The £200,000 to son uses NRB. Used NRB on first death: £200,000. NRB at that time was £325,000. Percentage unused: (325,000 − 200,000) / 325,000 = 38.5%.

Mrs B dies in 2026/27 with an estate of £700,000.

The RNRB transfer (less well known)

The RNRB became transferable from 6 April 2017, but unlike the NRB which is transferable for deaths going back decades, the RNRB transfer is unusual:

This is one of the most-missed reliefs on second-death estates. Always check the first-death estate's potential transferable RNRB.

The RNRB taper above £2m

Above a total estate of £2m, the RNRB tapers at £1 of relief lost per £2 of estate above £2m. Fully tapered away at £2.7m estate (the RNRB is gone above that level).

The transferred RNRB is also subject to the taper. For estates over £2.35m, the entire £350,000 (own + transferred RNRB) is fully tapered to zero.

For high-value estates, the cliff edge around £2m matters enormously — reducing the estate to £2m or below (e.g., through lifetime gifts) preserves both RNRBs intact.

How to claim on second death

  1. Executor of the second-dying spouse uses HMRC form IHT402 (Transferable NRB) and IHT436 (Transferable RNRB).
  2. Provides evidence of the first death and the unused percentage. Required documentation: copy of the deceased first spouse's death certificate, the original will or intestacy details, the executors' final account showing what was distributed and to whom, marriage/civil partnership certificate.
  3. The 2-year time limit for claiming starts at the end of the month in which the second spouse dies.
  4. HMRC may request further evidence; in complex estates, the calculation needs careful documentation.

If the second-dying spouse doesn't claim, the transferable amount is lost permanently.

Multiple marriages

If you've been widowed more than once, you can potentially claim transferred NRB from each previous spouse who died before you — but capped at 100% of the current NRB combined.

Worked example: Mrs C is widowed twice. First husband died in 1990 leaving everything to her (100% unused NRB). Second husband died in 2020 leaving everything to her (100% unused NRB). On Mrs C's death:

So Mrs C cannot stack to 300% of NRB — only to 200% (her own + one transferred). The cap is the limit.

Common transferable NRB mistakes

Sources

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