The Gift Tax

If you give people a lot of money, you might have to pay a federal gift tax. But the IRS also allows you to give up to $17,000 in 2023 and $18,000 in 2024 to any number of people without facing any gift taxes, and without the recipient owing any income tax on the gifts.

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Key Takeaways

Why it pays to understand the federal gift tax law

If you give people a lot of money or property, you might have to pay a federal gift tax. But most gifts are not subject to the gift tax. For instance, you can give up to the annual exclusion amount ($17,000 in 2023, 18,000 in 2024) to any number of people every year, without facing any gift taxes. Recipients generally never owe income tax on the gifts.

In addition to the annual gift amount, you can give a total of up to $12.92 million in 2023 over your lifetime before you start owing the gift tax. If you give $19,000 each to ten people in 2023, for example, you'd use up $20,000 of your $12.92 million lifetime tax-free limit—ten times the $2,000 by which your $19,000 gifts exceed the $17,000 per-person annual gift-free amount for 2023.

The general theory behind the gift tax

The federal gift tax exists for one reason: to prevent citizens from avoiding the federal estate tax by giving away their money before they die.

The gift tax is perhaps the most misunderstood of all taxes. When it comes into play, this tax is owed by the giver of the gift, not the recipient. You probably have never paid it and probably will never have to. The law completely ignores 2023 gifts of up to $17,000 per person, per year, that you give to any number of individuals. (You and your spouse together can make joint gifts up to $34,000 per person, per year to any number of individuals.)

If you have 1,000 friends on whom you wish to bestow $17,000 each, you can give away $17 million a year without even having to fill out a federal gift-tax form. That $17 million would be out of your estate for good. But if you made the $17 million in bequests via your will, the money would be part of your taxable estate and, depending on when you died, might trigger a large estate tax bill.

The interplay between the gift tax and the estate tax

The value of your estate is the total value of all of your assets at the time you die. The rules for 2023 tax estates over $12.92 million at rates as high as 40%. That $12.92 million is an exclusion meaning the first $12.92 million of your estate does not get taxed. For 2024 this limit increases to $13.61 million.

So why not give all of your property to your heirs before you die and avoid any estate tax that might apply? Clever, but the government is ahead of you. As noted above, you can move a lot of money out of your estate using the annual gift tax exclusion. Go beyond that, though, and you begin to eat into the exclusion that offsets the bill on the first $12.92 million of lifetime gifts in 2023. Go beyond the $12.92 million and you'll have to pay the gift tax—at rates that mirror the individual income tax, up to 40% in 2023.

The tax basis issue

As you consider making gifts, keep in mind that very different rules determine the tax basis of property someone receives by gift versus receives by inheritance. For example, if your son inherits your property, his tax basis would be the fair market value of the property on the date you die. That means all appreciation during your lifetime becomes tax-free.

However, if he receives the property as a gift from you, generally his tax basis is whatever your tax basis was. That means he'll likely owe tax on appreciation during your life, just like you would have if you sold the asset yourself. The rule that "steps up" basis to date of death value for inherited assets can save heirs billions of dollars every year.

A tax basis example

Your mother has a house with a tax basis of $60,000. The fair market value of the house is now $300,000. If your mother gives you the house as a gift, your tax basis would be $60,000. If you inherited the house after your mother's death in 2023, the tax basis would be $300,000, its fair market value on the date of her death. What difference does this make? If you sell the house for $310,000 shortly after you got it:

What is a gift?

For tax purposes, a gift is a transfer of property for less than its full value. In other words, if you aren't paid back, at least not fully, it's a gift.

In 2023, you can give a lifetime total of $12.92 million ($13.61 million in 2024) in taxable gifts (that exceed the annual tax-free limit) without triggering the gift tax. Beyond these limits, you would actually have to pay the gift tax.

Gifts not subject to the gift tax

Here are some gifts that are not considered "taxable gifts" and, therefore, do not count as part of your 2023 $12.92 million ($13.61 million for 2024) lifetime total.

Example: In 2023, an uncle who wants to help his nephew attend medical school sends the school $18,000 for a year's tuition. He also sends his nephew $17,000 for books, supplies and other expenses. Neither payment is reportable for gift tax purposes. If the uncle had sent the nephew $35,000 and the nephew had paid the school, the uncle would have made a reportable (but maybe not taxable) gift in the amount of $18,000 ($35,000 less the annual exclusion of $17,000) which would have reduced his $12.92 million lifetime exclusion by $18,000.

The gift tax is only due when the entire $12.92 million lifetime gift tax amount has been surpassed in 2023.

Payments to 529 state tuition plans are gifts, so you can exclude up to the annual $17,000 amount in 2023. In fact, you can give up to $85,000 in one year, using up five years worth of the exclusion, if you agree not to make another gift to the same person in the following four years.

Example: A grandmother contributes $85,000 to a qualified state tuition program for her grandchild in 2023. She decides to have this donation qualify for the annual gift exclusion for the next five years, and thus avoids using a portion of her $12.92 million gift tax exemption.