Estate Planning · Bristol

Protect your family's future with expert estate planning in Bristol

Wills, lasting powers of attorney and a clear plan — arranged remotely by specialists who cover Bristol, with your adviser alongside you.

Clifton and Redland property values put many estates into inheritance-tax range.

  • Specialist-drafted wills & LPAs
  • Protect your home and your children's inheritance
  • Fixed fees, no hidden commissions
Regulated specialistsFixed fees · no commissionNo obligationCovering Clifton, Redland, Bristol

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🔒 Private & secure. We connect you with regulated specialists covering Bristol — we don't give regulated advice ourselves.

40%
Inheritance Tax charged on the value of an estate above the available thresholds
£325,000
Nil-rate band per person, frozen until April 2030 while house prices rise
6 Apr 2027
When most unused pensions start counting towards your estate for IHT

What's at stake

What's really at stake when you don't plan

Most people in Bristol assume their family will simply inherit what they've built. In practice, the rules decide that for you. The nil-rate band has been frozen at £325,000 and stays frozen until April 2030, so rising house prices can quietly pull more ordinary homeowners over the threshold. Inheritance Tax is then charged at 40% on the value above your available allowances, and from 6 April 2027 most unused pension funds will be counted as part of your estate too. Without a clear plan, your family could face a large bill and added stress at a difficult time.

  • Die without a will and intestacy rules, not you, decide who inherits — and an unmarried partner may receive nothing
  • From 6 April 2027 most unused pensions are expected to fall inside your estate for IHT, which could pull many more Bristol families into the 40% band
  • The frozen £325,000 threshold means rising property values alone could create a tax bill your parents never faced
  • Without a registered Lasting Power of Attorney, your family may need a costly court application if you lose capacity
  • Assets left outright can be exposed to a beneficiary's divorce, creditors or poor decisions — protection has to be planned in advance

What's included

Exactly what a specialist handles for you

01

A will that actually reflects your wishes

A specialist drafts a clear, legally sound will so the right people inherit the right things — guardians for children, specific gifts, and a structure that avoids the chaos of intestacy.

02

Lasting Powers of Attorney, both types

They prepare and register your property & financial affairs LPA and your health & welfare LPA with the Office of the Public Guardian, so trusted people can act for you if illness or age ever takes that ability away.

03

A clear inheritance tax position

They calculate your likely IHT exposure across property, savings, investments and — from 6 April 2027 — pensions, then map out the nil-rate band, residence nil-rate band and spousal exemptions you may be able to use.

04

A practical lifetime gifting and exemption strategy

Where it suits you, they explain the 7-year rule, taper relief and the £3,000 annual exemption, so any gifts you choose to make are done sensibly and on the record.

05

Trusts where they genuinely add value

If appropriate, they explain how trusts can protect assets from divorce or creditors, provide for vulnerable or young beneficiaries, and control when and how an inheritance is received.

06

A single, organised plan your family can find

They pull wills, LPAs, beneficiary nominations and key documents into one coherent plan, so your affairs are in order and your executors know exactly where to look.

A worked example

An illustrative Bristol couple

The situation

John and Margaret, both 68, own a home in Bristol worth around £850,000, hold roughly £400,000 in savings and investments, and have two adult children. John also has an unused pension pot of about £300,000. Under the rules arriving on 6 April 2027, that pension would be expected to count towards his estate. On paper their combined estate sits well above the £1,000,000 a couple can typically pass on using both nil-rate bands and the residence nil-rate band — potentially leaving a meaningful slice exposed to 40% tax.

What a specialist could do

After reviewing their position, a specialist could suggest steps such as ensuring the home is structured to qualify for the residence nil-rate band, using available spousal exemptions, considering modest regular gifts within the annual exemption, and reviewing how the pension is held ahead of 2027. Depending on their circumstances, a coordinated plan may reduce the eventual bill — though any outcome is plan-dependent and never guaranteed.

Illustrative figures only. Not advice, and not a prediction of your result — your own numbers and the rules at the time will determine what is possible.

Why this way

The specialist route vs. the usual way

With us
Typical route
Inheritance Tax planning
Connect you to a specialist who reviews property, pensions and investments together and plans for the 2027 changes
A basic will template that ignores tax entirely
The 2027 pension change
Factored into your plan from the outset, before the rules take effect
Often missed by DIY kits and not flagged at all
Fees
Fixed, agreed upfront, no commission and no hidden percentages
Hourly billing that creeps, or 'free' will offers that recoup cost elsewhere
Lasting Powers of Attorney
Both types prepared and properly registered with the Office of the Public Guardian
Frequently forgotten until a crisis, then far harder and costlier to arrange
Trusts and asset protection
Considered where they genuinely help — divorce, creditors, vulnerable beneficiaries
Rarely offered, or oversold without real need
Who you deal with
A regulated, vetted specialist matched to your situation
An online form, a call centre, or a generalist with no estate planning depth

Is this you?

You'll get the most from this if…

You own a home in Bristol that, with savings and investments, may push your estate over the £325,000 threshold
You have a pension pot you haven't fully drawn and want to understand the 6 April 2027 changes
You haven't made a will, or your will is years out of date and no longer reflects your family
You have no Lasting Power of Attorney in place and want trusted people able to act if your health changes
You're remarried, have a blended family, or an unmarried partner you want to protect
You want to help children or grandchildren now, but sensibly and without creating problems later
You simply want your affairs in order and a clear plan your family can follow without stress

Fixed fees, no commission

Fixed fees, agreed upfront. No commission, ever.

We connect you with regulated specialists who quote a clear, fixed fee before any work begins — so you know exactly what you're paying and why. There are no hourly meters, no percentage-of-estate charges, and no commission on any product. Your first conversation is a no-obligation review of where you stand and what planning could achieve. You only proceed if it's genuinely worth it for you.

What's included

  • A no-obligation initial review of your estate, will and IHT position
  • A written, fixed-fee quote before any work starts
  • Drafting of your will and both Lasting Powers of Attorney
  • A plain-English explanation of your options and the 2027 pension change
  • A regulated specialist matched to your circumstances in Bristol
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How it works

Three simple steps, all from home

01

Tell us your situation

A few private questions — about 60 seconds. No jargon, no commitment.

02

Matched to a Bristol specialist

We connect you with a vetted, regulated specialist who covers Bristol.

03

A free, no-obligation call

Fixed fees agreed up front. No commission, no hard sell. You decide what happens next.

Questions

Estate Planning in Bristol

How much Inheritance Tax might my family actually pay?+

IHT is charged at 40% on the value of your estate above your available allowances. Each person has a £325,000 nil-rate band, frozen until April 2030, plus a residence nil-rate band of up to £175,000 when a main home passes to direct descendants (this tapers away for estates over £2,000,000). A married couple or civil partners can typically combine these to pass on up to £1,000,000. A specialist can calculate your specific position — the figure is always plan-dependent, never fixed.

What changes for pensions on 6 April 2027?+

Until now, most unused pension funds have usually sat outside your estate for IHT. From 6 April 2027, most unused pension funds and pension death benefits are expected to be included in the value of your estate. For many Bristol families with a property and a pension, this could be the single biggest reason to review their plan now rather than later, because it may pull an estate into the 40% band that previously sat below it.

What happens if I die without a will?+

Your estate is distributed under the intestacy rules, which follow a fixed legal order — not your wishes. An unmarried partner may inherit nothing, regardless of how long you were together, and the outcome for blended families is often not what people expect. A will lets you decide who inherits, appoint guardians for children, and make the whole process far simpler for those you leave behind.

Why do I need a Lasting Power of Attorney if I already have a will?+

A will only takes effect after death. A Lasting Power of Attorney protects you while you're alive but unable to manage your own affairs — through illness, an accident or age. There are two types: property & financial affairs, and health & welfare. Both are registered with the Office of the Public Guardian. Without one, your family may have to apply to the Court of Protection, which is slower, costlier and stressful at an already difficult time.

Can gifting really reduce the tax bill?+

It can, when done correctly. You can give away £3,000 each tax year under the annual exemption, and larger gifts are usually free of IHT if you survive seven years (the potentially exempt transfer rule), with taper relief reducing the tax between years three and seven. Any benefit is plan-dependent — gifting needs to fit your wider plan and your own financial security, so a specialist will look at it in the round rather than in isolation.

Do I need a trust?+

Many people don't — and a good specialist will tell you so. But trusts can be genuinely valuable in the right circumstances: protecting assets from a beneficiary's divorce or creditors, providing for a vulnerable or young beneficiary, or controlling when an inheritance is received. Some trusts have their own tax treatment, such as the relevant property regime, so they should only be used where the benefit clearly outweighs the cost and complexity.

Is this regulated advice, and who will I actually deal with?+

This site connects you with regulated, vetted specialists; we don't provide regulated advice ourselves. The professional you're matched with handles your will, LPAs and planning, gives you a fixed-fee quote upfront, and is accountable for the advice. You're free to walk away after the initial review with no obligation.

I'm in Bristol — does location matter?+

Estate planning law is the same across England and Wales, but local property values matter a great deal to your IHT position, and many people prefer a specialist who understands their area. We match you with someone suited to your circumstances in Bristol, with the option of meeting locally or reviewing things remotely, whichever suits you.

Jargon, in plain English

Nil-rate band
The amount of your estate taxed at 0% for Inheritance Tax — £325,000 per person, frozen until April 2030. Anything above your combined allowances is taxed at 40%.
Residence nil-rate band (RNRB)
An extra allowance of up to £175,000 when your main home passes to direct descendants such as children or grandchildren. It tapers away for estates worth more than £2,000,000.
Potentially exempt transfer (the 7-year rule)
A lifetime gift that becomes free of Inheritance Tax if you survive seven years from making it. Taper relief reduces the tax due if you die between years three and seven.
Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA)
A legal document letting people you trust act for you if you lose the ability to manage your own affairs. Two types exist — property & financial affairs, and health & welfare — both registered with the Office of the Public Guardian.
Intestacy
What happens when someone dies without a valid will. A fixed legal order decides who inherits, which often does not match what the person would have wanted.
Trust
A legal arrangement where assets are held by trustees for the benefit of others. Used to protect assets, provide for vulnerable or young beneficiaries, or control the timing of an inheritance; some trusts have their own tax treatment.

Guides & advice

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