My wife and I are nearing the end of probate for her late mother. She left a significant cash balance in savings accounts (excluding ISAs), which have been moved from her old accounts to a new one opened for probate administration with a building society. Closing the deceased's savings accounts of course triggered statements of gross interest earned, so we know these amounts. The total estate earnings from this and the subsequent period of administration gross interest, will exceed the £500 interest threshold ignored by HMRC, so we'll need to contact them to pay the 20% they're due.
Last I time I dealt with probate, many years ago, the only way to account for the estate interest earnings was to close that savings account (temporarily putting it on zero interest in a current a/c), triggering such an interest statement. As my wife will inherit the proceeds alone, and will want to store these for now in building societies, that means closing and then reopening a building society account just to calculate the gross tax declaration.
Can this be avoided?
Last I time I dealt with probate, many years ago, the only way to account for the estate interest earnings was to close that savings account (temporarily putting it on zero interest in a current a/c), triggering such an interest statement. As my wife will inherit the proceeds alone, and will want to store these for now in building societies, that means closing and then reopening a building society account just to calculate the gross tax declaration.
Can this be avoided?



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