HMRC have opened a new consultation ‘Income Tax: Low-income trusts and estates’ which considers whether trusts and estates with small amounts of income should be removed from Income Tax.

Strictly speaking, as trustees and personal representatives do not benefit from personal allowances, trust and estates have to report all income earned through Self Assessment, irrespective of how small the amount of income is.

However, in 2016 when bank and building society interest stopped being taxed at source, HMRC introduced a temporary concession whereby trustees and Personal Representatives (PRs) were removed from Income Tax where the only source of income for the trust or estate was Savings interest and the tax liability was below £100.

HMRC are now consulting on formalising this arrangement with details of the precise form and level to be confirmed post consultation.

Under the proposals:

  • Low-income trusts and estates with income from any source up to a ‘de minimis’ amount (to be decided following the consultation) would not be subject to Income Tax on that income.
  • For trusts and estates with income more than the de minimis amount, Income Tax would be due on the full amount rather than only applying to income above the de minimis amount. 
  • Where discretionary trusts would be covered by the de minimis rule, they will still have to pay tax when they pay income out to a beneficiary, to ensure that the tax credit remains funded. This is the same as the current position where the tax pool is not sufficient to cover tax credits on payments to beneficiaries.

The consultation document confirms that HMRC are not considering the introduction of a personal allowance for trustees and PRs. This is due to the complexities of how some trusts are taxed and the complicated set of rules that would be required for such an allowance to operate.

The consultation closes on 18 July 2022 and responses should be sent by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

Consultation questions

Q1: Bearing in mind that the proposals aim to reduce burdens on trustees and personal representatives of low-income trusts and estates, do you have comments on the proposal to legislate a de minimis system?

Q2: Do you have comments on how a de minimis system may impact on beneficiaries and settlors of trusts or estates?

Q3: Do you have comments on the proposals for discretionary trust tax pool adjustments and interactions with the disaggregation rules?

Useful guides on this topic

UK Trusts
What is a trust? What types of trust are there? How are UK trusts taxed?

Estates: Income Tax and Capital Gains Tax
How do executors deal with income and capital gains arising on the deceased’s estate? What allowances and reliefs are available?

Trusts & Tax planning
What is a trust? How can trusts be used in tax planning? What are the advantages and what are the pitfalls?

Savings income: tax-free savings
What types of savings income are exempt from Income Tax? What savings income can be received tax-free? What are the limits? 

External link

Consultation: ‘Income tax: Low income trusts and estates’ 


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