80% Of Farmers Worry For Survival Due To Family Farm Tax
- Linda Andrews - Editorial Assistant, Family Business United
- Aug 26
- 2 min read

A new poll of 500 farmers and landowners has revealed how the government’s ‘family farm tax’ is wrecking trust, livelihoods and Labour’s future in rural seats.
The survey, conducted by the Country Land and Business Association (CLA), has highlighted the far-reaching consequences of the Treasury’s plans to cut vital inheritance tax reliefs for farms and family businesses from April.
Nearly 80% of respondents said they are worried their business will not survive the next ten years, while over 60% have considered selling their farm and leaving the industry.
Not a single respondent of the 500 said they would vote for Labour at the next election, while 36% said they would back Reform, with the Conservatives on 38%.
Earlier this summer the Treasury published an impact assessment of the changes, along with the draft legislation of the policy. It claimed capping inheritance tax reliefs will not have "any significant macroeconomic impacts". The assessment argued it "is not expected to have a material impact on food security" and "would not be expected to impact the UK’s ability to source imports from international markets".
The findings of this new survey cast doubt on these claims. Victoria Vyvyan, CLA President, said:
"The Treasury says these reforms will barely touch rural Britain. Our polling shows they will force hard choices on farms that have sustained communities for generations – selling their land, laying people off, shelving plans for the future."
"Already, families are weighing up which parts of their business they can afford to keep. Some are holding back investment; others are wondering if they can hand the farm on at all."
"Rural Labour MPs can see what’s coming. They know it will drain the life from the countryside and strip away the trust of the people who sent them to Westminster. If they support it, their voters won’t forget.”
Meanwhile 69% of respondents said they will have to sell land or take out loans to keep the business – with nearly half predicting they’ll have to sell at least a quarter of their farm.
It also found 89% have paused or delayed investment since the budget, with 27% saying they have held back from investing over £150,000.
A separate study earlier this year conducted by independent consultancy CBI-Economics, found that more than 200,000 jobs could be lost during this Parliament. The changes could produce a net fiscal loss of £1.9 billion for the Treasury and wipe £14.9bn from the economy in lost business activity, it concluded.