Farmers in England and Wales feel betrayed by inheritance tax changes, says NFU

Farmers in England and Wales feel betrayed by inheritance tax changes, says NFU


The president of the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) has said that farmers in England and Wales feel “betrayed” by changes to inheritance tax rules, while saying his organisation does not condone mooted plans to stop food reaching supermarket shelves.

A number of farmers protested in Llandudno on Saturday as Keir Starmer addressed the Welsh Labour conference. The prime minister did not talk directly about the inheritance tax changes in his speech, but did say he “would defend our decisions in the budget all-day long”.

Previously, farmland had not been subject to inheritance tax, with ministers saying this has often been used as a tax loophole by wealthy people who buy up agricultural plots. Under the plans announced in the budget, from April 2026, farmland worth more than £1m will be taxed at 20%, half the usual inheritance tax rate.

The government has said that little more than a quarter of farmers will be affected by the new rules, while the NFU says the real figure is about two-thirds.

There was also, he said, the effect on farmers, particularly older farmers who would struggle to adapt to the new regime: “Unfortunately, there are many who already have lost a spouse, that are in the twilight of their careers, that have given everything to producing this country’s food, and they have absolutely no way to plan through that. That is the betrayal that I’m talking about. The human impact of this is simply not acceptable.”

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“That is not an NFU tactic,” he said. “We do not support emptying supermarket shelves. But I do completely understand the strength of feeling that there is amongst farmers. They feel helpless today and they’re trying to think of what they can do to try and demonstrate what this means to them. I understand their strength of feeling, but we are not supporting that action.”

Speaking earlier on the same show, Louise Haigh, the transport secretary, defended the budget changes. She said: “Look, none of us came into politics in order to leverage tax on the farming community, but we were left with a very difficult fiscal inheritance.”

She said wider changes to farming set out by the environment department would benefit the industry overall.



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