TRANSFER THESE 3 ASSETS BEFORE YOU NEED A CARE HOME: Or The Council Takes 100% (2026 Warning)
England has a number that decides almost everything about what happens to a lifetime of savings, and very few people over 60 in this country know what it is. Twenty-three thousand, two hundred and fifty pounds. That is the upper capital threshold in the social care means test. If your assessable capital sits above that figure on the day you go into residential care, you pay every single penny of the bill yourself. Not most of it. All of it. The average fee in England is now between fourteen hundred and seventeen hundred pounds a week depending on the area and the level of nursing needed. The part that catches families completely off guard is that there is no seven-year rule for care fees. There is no time limit at all. A council can look back five years, fifteen years, thirty years, if they believe the reason you transferred an asset was to avoid paying for your care. The seven-year rule you may have heard of belongs to inheritance tax. It has nothing to do with care fees. For care fees, the only question is whether you reduced your wealth when you could reasonably have anticipated needing care, and whether that was a significant reason for the decision. If the answer is yes, the council can treat you as still owning the asset. That is called deprivation of assets, and it is the single most important concept in this entire conversation. In this video I walk through the three specific assets where the timing of any transfer actually matters — the family home, liquid capital, and pension drawdown income — what the spousal disregard does and doesn't protect, why cohabiting couples sit on a cliff edge their married friends don't, the property protection trust structure that protects half the home if it is set up early enough, the normal expenditure out of income exemption that lets surplus income leave the estate immediately, and the deferred payment agreement that can prevent a panicked sale. SOURCES → Care Act 2014 and the Care and Support Statutory Guidance (Department of Health and Social Care) → The Care and Support (Charging and Assessment of Resources) Regulations 2014 → Care and Support Statutory Guidance — Annex E (Deprivation of assets) → HM Land Registry — Practice Guide 24: Private trusts of land → Society of Later Life Advisers (SOLLA) — Finding accredited specialist advisers → Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners (STEP) — Finding a qualified solicitor for trust drafting DISCLAIMER This video is general information about the social care means test in England and the asset planning available before care needs arise. It is not financial, tax, or legal advice and it is not tailored to your situation. For your own case, you need a SOLLA-accredited financial adviser on the financial side and a STEP-qualified solicitor on the trusts and estate planning side. The interaction between care fees, inheritance tax, and the April 2027 pension rule change is complex, and the right plan depends on your specific family circumstances, the way your assets are currently held, and the timing of any planning steps relative to foreseeable care needs. If this video was useful, the single most helpful thing you can do is share it with someone in their sixties or seventies who owns their home outright and has not yet had this conversation with a specialist. The people who most need to see it are the ones least likely to go looking. #CareFees #DeprivationOfAssets #UKEstatePlanning #PropertyProtectionTrust #LaterLifePlanning #InheritanceTax #UKPensions

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