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Why speed could be the most important factor in IHT planning

Why speed could be the most important factor in IHT planning
Getting clients to act quickly on estate planning advice is a consistent challenge for advisers. (FT Money)

Speaking to advisers for many years now has allowed me to realise that a consistently challenging task they face is not only establishing the best route to take when offering estate planning advice to clients, but also in getting clients to accept it and then act.

Without action, the best laid plans of both mice and financial planners will not be successful and deliver value.

The reasons cited for this inertia commonly centre around two systemic problems.

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Timing

The first obvious one is the client normally has absolutely no idea when they are going to die.

This poses an issue as nobody knows exactly how long the client has to act, so generating any sort of urgency is impossible.

It is also due to this uncertainty in timing, that nobody has any idea which plans would ultimately prove successful.

Life insurance is the key exception to this as it would offer an immediate impact, but taking out whole-of-life insurance cover poses an indefinite ongoing financial liability; the exact opposite of the kind of clarity that clients would be after before taking action.

Therefore, any plan that cannot offer the certainty of being effective from an IHT perspective from day one will be unattractive as it will inspire a lack of confidence and invite a delay in action.

Either issue would prove to be a bump in the road; both together are a cul-de-sac.

Fortune telling

The second common issue is that if the client does not have a crystal ball, they cannot know exactly what is in store for their financial fortunes and so cannot compute what their final IHT liability will be when they die.

If they do not know this, how can they possibly establish how much they can afford to part with or how much insurance cover they actually need (to afford)?

Again, if clients neither have ongoing access to all their funds nor know exactly what they can afford, they will find it near impossible to commit to a plan that deprives them of their assets in some way.

For these two main reasons, discussions over estate planning can all too often be held without the agreement of actually taking action on a specific plan. And as we all know, 'failing to plan is planning to fail'.

So, what is important to solve this?

Ultimately if the plan you recommend to clients works speedily and allows clients to retain access to all their assets, you will have removed both of the main issues they find stops them from taking action.

How?

A survey conducted by Ingenious with Personal Finance Society members when discussing these very issues showed us that 73 per cent of active estate planning and later-life advisers thought that a business relief (BR)-based investment service with life insurance built in would be “the ideal estate planning solution to offer clients".