Trust usage on the rise amid IHT and reporting requirement pressures

The use of trusts is on the rise in the UK as their role in estate and succession planning continues to grow in importance, according to Utmost Wealth Solutions.

The firm’s analysis of the latest HMRC data through the Trust Registration Service showed there were around 835,000 trusts and estates registered up to 31 March 2025, and remained open as at 29 August 2025.

There were 121,000 new registrations for trusts and estates in the 2024/25 financial year, making up around a seventh of the total.

This sustained increase in registrations reflected the increasing relevance of trusts, Utmost said, with more families being drawn into inheritance tax (IHT) by the freeze to thresholds.

Rising property values and asset growth had resulted in steady growth in the proportion of estates liable to IHT, with an estimated one in 10 expected to be liable by 2030/31.

Other recent policy changes, including the tighter treatment of agricultural and business property reliefs and proposals to bring unused pensions into scope of IHT on death, were likely to have further increased interest in trusts among high net worth families and financial advisers, Utmost noted.

Utmost Wealth Solutions global wealth specialist, Marc Acheson, highlighted that trusts continued to be used as a core planning tool to gift assets, organise succession, and manage long-term family wealth.

“The continued growth in trust registrations is entirely understandable,” he continued.

“With the IHT nil-rate band frozen for more than 15 years and the tax base being widened through successive policy changes, more families are finding themselves exposed to IHT and are turning to trusts as a well-established way of organising succession and mitigating long-term liabilities.

“What is becoming increasingly apparent, however, is that while trust usage is rising, so too is the complexity that comes with acting as a trustee.”

Trustees are facing expanded automatic exchange of information (AEOI) obligations, with mandatory AEOI rules being extended to trusts that meet the financial assets test because they are considered ‘managed investment entities’.

Acheson added: “With the regulatory burden growing, fulfilling fiduciary duties has become significantly more demanding.

“Therefore, who to appoint as trustee – and whether they have the expertise, systems and regulatory resilience to cope with today’s requirements – has never been more critical.”



Share Story:

Recent Stories


FREE E-NEWS SIGN UP

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive breaking news and other industry announcements by email.

  Please tick here to confirm you are happy to receive third party promotions from carefully selected partners.


Perenna and the long-term fixed mortgage market
Content editor, Dan McGrath, spoke to head of product, proposition and distribution at Perenna, John Davison, to explore the long-term fixed mortgage market, the role that Perenna plays in this sector and the impact of the recent Autumn Budget

The role of the bridging market and technology usage in the industry
Content editor, Dan McGrath, sat down with chief operating officer at Black & White Bridging, Damien Druce, and head of development finance at Empire Global Finance, Pete Williams, to explore the role of the bridging sector, the role of AI across the industry and how the property market has fared in the Labour Government’s first year in office.

NEW BUILD IN FOCUS - NEW EPISODE OF THE MORTGAGE INSIDER PODCAST, OUT NOW
Figures from the National House-Building Council saw Q1 2025 register a 36% increase in new homes built across the UK compared with the same period last year, representing a striking development for the first-time buyer market. But with the higher cost of building, ongoing planning challenges and new and changing regulations, how sustainable is this growth? And what does it mean for brokers?

Does the North-South divide still exist in the UK housing market?
What do the most expensive parts of the country reveal about shifting demand? And why is the Manchester housing market now outperforming many southern counterparts?



In this episode of the Barclays Mortgage Insider Podcast, host Phil Spencer is joined by Lucian Cook, Head of Research at Savills, and Ross Jones, founder of Home Financial and Evolve Commercial Finance, to explore how regional trends are redefining the UK housing, mortgage and buy-to-let markets.