How it works

Clear records you can rely on

Gift Recorder turns scattered notes, paperwork (and perhaps even spreadsheets) into one organised history of your lifetime giving — ready when your family or executors need it.

The key ideas

Lifetime gifts

A gift is anything of value you give away while you're alive. Gift Recorder keeps a dated record of each one — what it was, who received it, and what it was worth.

The 7-year clock

Many gifts are Potentially Exempt Transfers (PETs): they fall outside your estate once they have survived seven years. Gift Recorder shows where each gift sits in that window.

Exemptions

Some gifts use an exemption — the annual exemption, small gifts, wedding gifts, or normal expenditure out of income. You record which one applies; we keep the running picture.

Evidence

A gift is far easier to prove with the paperwork attached. Store letters, bank references and valuations alongside each entry, kept private and encrypted.

Three steps, then it's just upkeep

  1. 1

    Sign up through your adviser

    Create your account and choose the firm that introduced you. You stay in control of who can see your records.

  2. 2

    Record your gifts

    Add each gift with its details, category and evidence. Go back as far as you need to — there's no rush to be complete on day one.

  3. 3

    Keep it current

    Watch the 7-year clock, fill any evidence gaps, and export a clear schedule whenever it's needed for probate or your records.

Why it helps

Clearer planning conversations

With everything in one place, you and your adviser can review your seven-year position and inheritance-tax planning from the same clear picture — instead of piecing it together from memory.

An easier job for your executors

A complete, evidenced schedule means probate materials are quicker to prepare, with less risk of delay-related penalties — leaving more of your estate for the people you choose.

Gift Recorder is a record-keeping tool. It does not give personalised tax, legal or investment advice, calculate a final inheritance-tax liability, or imply HMRC acceptance. For advice on your own circumstances, speak to your professional adviser.