Farming Scotland Magazine (September - October Issue 2021)

Page 110

finance Providing for non-farming children Passing assets on to non-farming children may seem complicated but there are options to do so while keeping the farm intact. For any farming family with more than one child there will be a point at which the topic of inheritance is raised and how the assets will be divided, particularly if not all the children are involved in the farming business, explains Julia Banwell, director and chartered financial planner at rural accountant, Old Mill. “On the whole, most will want to keep the farm as intact as possible, so how can parents provide for their nonfarming offspring?” Splitting the inheritance fairly doesn’t necessarily mean equally, she says. “Fair is your own assessment of what you believe is right. So when you are considering how to divide assets between the children, the most important thing

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is that you are comfortable with the split, whether that is equal or not.” But when it comes to assessing assets, what should be considered? “Family farmers often have farm cottages, pensions, savings or buy-to-let properties which can be used to provide a lump sum to non-farming children,” says Mrs Banwell. Though cottages often remain with the farm, they could be left to non-farming children with the Will containing a set option or covenant for the farming child to have first refusal to purchase them if and when sold. If property assets are off-farm, like buy-to-lets, this is less likely to be a necessity. “There is also an option to nominate pensions upon death to the non-farming children, and savings and cash funds could be similarly used. However, it is

important to work through the cost of inheritance tax to understand exactly what will be left for them after the tax bill has been met,” she adds. “Where there are no off-farm assets, there is the option to divide the farm – though this is rarely the preferred choice. In this situation, the main farm area could be left to the farming child, with outlying land allocated to the other children – again perhaps with an option to purchase stated in the Will for the farming child,” explains Mrs Banwell. “Alternatively, the entire farm could be left to all the descendants, with some or all of it in trust. This means that if land is sold, the proceeds will be split between all of them.” Where some of the farmland has development potential, it may be sensible to treat it differently to

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the rest of the farm. “The potential development land could be left in trust to all of the children, with a proviso that it can be let to the farming child while it remains undeveloped,” she says. “Or it could be left to the non-farming children only, with an expression that there should be the option for the farming child to rent it prior to development.” “And transferring this type of land to a trust before death could lock in Agricultural Property Relief or Business Property Relief as they are set at present.” Another option is to put in place a Whole of Life insurance policy, suggests Mrs Banwell. “This is a policy which pays out a lump sum upon death – providing the premiums are paid throughout your lifetime. “Though it involves paying a premium every month, it can be


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Articles inside

Who’s going where?

3min
pages 130-132

Southern Belle

3min
page 129

Four books reviewed

2min
page 128

Events

3min
page 127

Clothing

2min
page 113

The Money Man

6min
pages 111-112

Machinery

8min
pages 114-126

Finance

2min
page 110

The Cairngorms (Part 5

5min
pages 108-109

Opportunities abound

4min
page 106

With Linda Mellor

3min
page 105

Life on the Islands

2min
page 104

Scottish Game Fair

7min
pages 100-101

Equine

1min
page 99

Conservation Matters

4min
page 98

Scottish Land & Estates

3min
page 97

Estate

2min
page 96

Scottish Forestry

3min
page 95

Forestry

3min
pages 92-94

Pigs

3min
page 89

People

6min
pages 90-91

National Sheep Association

4min
page 88

Scottish Government

6min
pages 86-87

Sheep

5min
pages 83-85

NFU Scotland

3min
page 82

Dairy

2min
pages 80-81

Hutton Institute

3min
page 79

The Vet

5min
pages 77-78

Livestock

9min
pages 67-75

A Livestock Diary

3min
page 66

Quality Meat Scotland

4min
page 76

Rural life around Loch Ness

6min
pages 64-65

Orkney Boreray Sheep

4min
pages 62-63

Ploughs

8min
pages 42-47

Muck Spreaders

4min
pages 54-60

New Zealand (part 2

3min
pages 48-49

Mackenzies Farm Shop Shetland

3min
pages 52-53

British Ploughing Championships

2min
page 51

Increased grain productivity at Balgonie Estate

5min
pages 38-39

Let’s make ice cream

5min
pages 40-41

The Vertical Farm

2min
page 35

Lambs and Strawbs

2min
page 16

Scotch Butchers Club Winners!

2min
page 14

In my view

9min
pages 7-13

Scotland the Brand

3min
page 15

Winter crop preparation with St Catherine’s Seeds

4min
pages 18-19

A problem solved by Vogelsang

3min
pages 24-25

Farming for the Climate

6min
pages 21-22

Crofting

3min
page 23
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