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left arrowPrevious Page: Publication 947 - Practice Before the IRS and Power of Attorney - How To Get Tax Help
right arrowNext Page: Publication 950 - Introduction to Estate and Gift Taxes - Gift Tax
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Publication 950

Introduction  
to Estate  
and Gift  
Taxes


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What's New


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The provisions of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 made a number of changes to the estate tax and the gift tax rates and to the applicable exclusion amounts.

Introduction

If you give someone money or property during your life, you may be subject to federal gift tax. The money and property you own when you die (your estate) may be subject to federal estate tax. The purpose of this publication is to give you a general understanding of when these taxes apply and when they do not. It explains how much money or property you can give away during your lifetime or leave to your heirs at your death before any tax will be owed. Gifts you make during your life or bequests from your estate can also be subject to an additional tax, the generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax, if the gifts or bequests are to a person, such as a grandchild, who is more than one generation younger than you.


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No tax owed.


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Most gifts are not subject to the gift tax and most estates are not subject to the estate tax. For example, there is usually no tax if you make a gift to your spouse or to a charity or if your estate goes to your spouse or to a charity at your death. If you make a gift to someone else, the gift tax does not apply until the value of the gifts you give that person exceeds the annual exclusion for the year. See Annual exclusion under Gift Tax, on page 4.

Even if tax applies to your gifts or your estate, it may be eliminated by the unified credit, discussed later.


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No return needed.


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Gift tax returns are filed annually. However, you do not need to file a gift tax return unless you give someone, other than your spouse, money or property worth more than the annual exclusion (discussed on page 4) for that year. An estate tax return generally will not be needed unless the estate is worth more than the applicable exclusion amount for the year of death. This amount is shown in the table under Unified Credit (Applicable Exclusion Amount), on page 4.


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No tax on the person receiving your gift or estate.


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The person who receives your gift or your estate will not have to pay any federal gift tax or estate tax because of it. Also, that person will not have to pay income tax on the value of the gift or inheritance received.


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No income tax deduction.


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Making a gift or leaving your estate to your heirs does not ordinarily affect your federal income tax. You cannot deduct the value of gifts you make (other than gifts that are deductible charitable contributions).


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What this publication contains.


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If you are not sure whether the gift tax or the estate tax applies to your situation, the rest of this publication may help you. It explains in general terms:

This publication does not contain any information about state or local taxes. That information should be available from your local taxing authority.


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Where to find out more.


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This publication does not contain all the rules and exceptions for federal estate and gift taxes. It does not contain the rules that apply to nonresident aliens. If you need more information, see the following publication, forms, and instructions:

To order these forms, call 1-800-TAX-FORMS (1-800-829-3676). If you have access to TTY/TDD equipment, you can call 1-800-829-4059. To get these forms using your personal computer, go to www.irs.gov.


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Unified Credit (Applicable Exclusion Amount)


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left link arrow Unified Credit right link arrow

A credit is an amount that eliminates or reduces tax. A unified credit applies to both the gift tax and the estate tax. You must subtract the unified credit from any gift tax that you owe. Any unified credit you use against your gift tax in one year reduces the amount of credit that you can use against your gift tax in a later year. The total amount used during life against your gift tax reduces the credit available to use against your estate tax.

The unified credit against taxable gifts will remain at $345,800 (exempting $1 million from tax) through 2009, while the unified credit against estate tax increases during the same period. The following table shows the unified credit and applicable exclusion amount for the calendar years in which a gift is made or a decedent dies after 2001.

  For Gift Tax Purposes: For Estate Tax Purposes:
Year Unified Credit Applicable
Exclusion
Amount
Unified Credit Applicable
Exclusion
Amount
2002 and 2003 345,800m 1,000,000m 345,800m 1,000,000m
2004 and 2005 345,800m 1,000,000m 555,800m 1,500,000m
2006, 2007, and 2008 345,800m 1,000,000m 780,800m 2,000,000m
2009 345,800m 1,000,000m 1,455,800m 3,500,000m
For examples of how the credit works, see Applying the Unified Credit to Gift Tax and Applying the Unified Credit to Estate Tax, later.

left arrowPrevious Page:  Publication 947 - Practice Before the IRS and Power of Attorney - How To Get Tax Help
right arrowNext Page:  Publication 950 - Introduction to Estate and Gift Taxes - Gift Tax
Use   left arrowright arrow  to find additional instances of index items.