Taxes On Sale Of Inherited Property
REM # F631
By Ilyce R. Glink
Summary: A reader inherits cash from the sale of a property that was in the family. Ilyce thinks that tax would only be paid on the capital gains after the sale of the property and suggests that a little bit of planning may save everyone a lot of money when tax season comes around.
Q: My mother-in-law was left property after her husband's death in 1997. We
sold the property last week.
The proceeds were divided 3 ways: one-third to my mother-in-law, and one-third each to my husband and his sister.
What would be the best way to handle the capital gains tax on the money? My
accountant estimates we’ll pay 21 percent. Is there a way to lower this
percentage?
A: I'm confused about who actually owns the property. If your mother-in-law
owned the property, then she would pay capital gains tax on the difference between
the value of the property the day she inherited and the value of the property
on the day she sold it.
For example, if the property was worth $100,000 on the day her husband died,
she inherited the property tax-free from his estate. If it was worth $200,000
the day it was sold, she would pay long-term capital gains tax up to 15 percent
on the difference.
But if your husband and his sister didn't own the property, they shouldn't be
involved just yet.
Your mother-in-law has the ability to give tax-free gifts to her children, friends
or relatives of up to $11,000 each per calendar year. If she gives you, your
husband and each of your two children $11,000 each, that's a tax-free gift of
$44,000. She can give that in each calendar year and you would owe no tax on
that gift. She can do the same with his sister and her family.
In this way, the only tax that would be paid would be her own long-term capital
gains taxes owed on the sale of the property.
As for what your accountant says, I have no way of knowing on what he is basing
his numbers. But I suggest you go back and see if there isn't a smarter way
of distributing the proceeds from this sale.
A little bit of planning may save everyone a lot of money when tax season comes
around.
NOTE: This column is distributed by Real Estate Matters Syndicate, PO Box 366, Glencoe, Illinois, 60022. This column may not be resold, reprinted, resyndicated or redistributed without written permission from the publisher.
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