The capital gains tax (CGT) increase announced in this week’s budget will mean trustees and personal representatives administering the estates of the deceased could feel the full brunt of the rise, the Law Society has warned, as gains made will be at risk of exposure to the new higher rate.

The new rate of 28% will charge any gains made while the estate is being administered, and also gains for the duration of a trust.

Will trusts, created by parents of young children or vulnerable adults, are particularly exposed to the new regime, says Chancery Lane.

Law Society president Robert Heslett said: ‘Many hard-working families will often look to create a protective tax regime for their children in the event that they are orphaned at a young age by leaving assets in trust until the children are old enough to manage the assets without the guiding hand of their parents. There is a real danger of trust assets being eroded through a combination of income tax at 50 per cent, CGT at 28 per cent and the impact of the changes to the inheritance regime introduced in 2006.’

The Law Society is urging trustees and those charged with administering an estate to tread carefully when reviewing trusts or practices in light of the new CGT rate. Heslett added: ‘This reinforces the importance of using a solicitor instead of an unqualified, unregulated will-writer for trust or probate matters. In light of this new tax regime and the complications that come with it, do you really want an unqualified, unregulated executor or trustee administering your estate after you pass away, rather than a solicitor who is professional, robustly regulated, qualified and insured? Even where a solicitor has not been appointed to administer a trust or estate, anyone who has been given that role should go to a solicitor, who is best placed to take all these issues into account.’