The value of the ground underfoot in a field in the Welsh Marches, the Vale of Evesham, or the level Lincolnshire fens has been increasing for the past 20 years due to investment demand, speculation about carbon credits, and the simple math of fixed supply satisfying ongoing interest. The farmer who works the land might get a small yearly income from it; this amount has nothing to do with the land’s market value.
This is the primary factor that distinguishes inheritance tax in agriculture from nearly every other industry: the asset base is substantial in comparison to cash flow, and when a tax obligation arises at succession, the land itself is the only apparent source of funding. Through Agricultural Property Relief, successive UK governments attempted to stop people from selling land to pay land taxes. Whether the current form of that relief truly works is the question.
Estates receive 100% relief on the first £1 million in combined business and agricultural assets under the UK’s updated IHT regulations, and 50% relief on any amount over that. The effective tax rate on the surplus is 20% rather than 40% since the 50% relief causes the taxable portion to be halved before the 40% rate takes effect.
The first £1 million of a £3 million agricultural estate is completely exempt, and the remaining £2 million is subject to 20% tax, resulting in a charge of £400,000. Since the idea was announced, the agricultural community has been openly questioning, with tractors in Parliament Square, whether a farm making, say, £30,000 to £50,000 in profit annually can make a £400,000 payment without selling assets.
In response, the government claims that only the biggest estates—those valued at several million pounds and frequently held partially as investment entities rather than operational farms—will be subject to hefty bills. It is possible for both to be true at the same time. Some real working farm families will be severely impacted by the proposal. Some affluent landowners who were primarily using agricultural relief as a tax planning tool may also be impacted.
On paper, the U.S. situation appears to be very different. The bulk of American agricultural families are below the $15 million per person or $30 million married couple federal estate tax exemption for 2026. The “family farm being forced to sell for estate tax” myth that permeates American political discourse is less objectively common than its emotional resonance may suggest because of the exemption, which has been brought up numerous times over the previous 20 years.
For farms that do get close to the threshold, Section 2032A of the IRS code offers an extra safeguard: qualifying land may be valued at its actual agricultural use value rather than its potential development value. This can drastically lower the taxable base for farms close to cities where land prices reflect speculative rather than agricultural demand. For the majority of American farmers, the federal inheritance tax is mostly a planning consideration rather than an impending financial problem due to the substantial exemption and use-value election.
On the opposite end of the spectrum is Pakistan. Agricultural land is not subject to either federal or provincial inheritance taxes, and the revenue Tax Ordinance of 2001 continues to exempt agricultural revenue from federal income tax. When land deeds are transferred, provincial stamp duties and transfer taxes are applicable. These are transaction fees rather than succession taxes based on estate valuation, but they can be significant expenses on significant transfers. The goal is clear: to shield an agricultural industry that is extremely susceptible to price volatility and climate change from the extra cost of succession-related taxes.
In practical terms, a farming family passing land through a generation in Pakistan faces a fundamentally different financial challenge than the same operation in Yorkshire. However, whether the absence of any inheritance-based agricultural tax produces the best long-term outcome for Pakistan’s land distribution is a different discussion, one that economists and policy analysts continue to have.

There is a sense that the best course of action is actually ambiguous and likely depends on background that differs among national agricultural structures, given how different nations have come to such disparate conclusions regarding the same topic. Real-time stress testing of the UK’s transition is underway. It will take years to compile the results for individual farms into a comprehensive picture of whether or not the £1 million threshold is actually functioning as promised.
