The return of the probate fiasco
Comments Off on The return of the probate fiascoCast your mind back to February 2016, when the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) published a consultation paper proposing a complete change to how probate fees will be charged. Replacing the current flat fee approach with a set of bands which went up to a £20,000 fee for estates valued at over £2m. The consultation provoked an outcry with 810 out of 831 respondents disagreeing with the proposed fee scale.
Probate is the legal process of administering an estate on someone’s death and the fees charged are supposed to cover costs incurred.
The Government nevertheless displayed the ultimate tin ear and announced in March 2017 that it would go ahead with the new scales from May of that year. The news prompted questions from the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments about the legality of increases that were a de facto tax and could have required more than a mere statutory instrument to be put into effect. The prime minister then called her ill-fated election and with that the plans were abandoned for lack of Parliamentary time, not to mention electoral disapproval.
Now, after a Budget which made no mention of inheritance tax reform, the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Justice has issued a written statement on increases to probate fees in England & Wales. The statement did not spell out the scale, which is to be found in a draft statutory instrument. The new and old proposed scales are detailed below:
Value of estate | Initial Proposal | New |
Up £50,000 | Nil | Nil |
£50,001 – £300,000 | £300 | £250 |
£300,001 – £500,000 | £1,000 | £750 |
£500,001 – £1,000,000 | £4,000 | £2,500 |
£1,000,000 – £1,600,000 | £8,000 | £4,000 |
£1,600,001 – £2,000,000 | £12,000 | £5,000 |
Over £2,000,000 | £20,000 | £6,000 |
The new scale is set to come into force 21 days after the Statutory Instrument becomes law and is expected to generate an additional £145m for the MoJ in 2019/20, about half of what the earlier proposals would have produced. As the current probate fees (£215 for an individual, £155 for solicitors) currently cover the MoJ’s costs, the argument about whether the increases constitute a tax could reappear.
The MoJ’s explanatory memorandum emphasises the overall cost of the Court Service as a justification for the increases, implicitly accepting that its action is a revenue-raising measure.
The ministerial statement has already provoked criticism. In the current fractious political conditions, the Government may face challenges in pushing the increases through. The new banding offers the largest saving over the previous proposals to estates over £500,000, which could be a hard sell.