Estate Taxes Explained

Understand federal and state estate taxes, exemptions, rates, and strategies to minimize your tax burden when planning your legacy.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
Created on

The federal estate tax applies to the transfer of a deceased person’s assets exceeding specific thresholds, calculated based on the fair market value of their gross estate at death. This tax targets large estates to prevent excessive wealth concentration, with exemptions shielding most Americans.

Defining the Gross Estate: What Counts?

Your gross estate encompasses all property and interests you own or control at death, valued at fair market rates rather than original purchase prices. The IRS mandates including diverse assets to ensure comprehensive taxation.

Common inclusions feature:

  • Real property such as homes, land, or rental units
  • Financial holdings like bank accounts, stocks, bonds, and mutual funds
  • Retirement vehicles including 401(k)s, IRAs, and pensions
  • Life insurance payouts where the decedent retained ownership or control
  • Business stakes, partnerships, or closely held company shares
  • Tangible items like vehicles, art, jewelry, and household goods
  • Trust interests, annuities, and certain joint property portions

Special rules pull in pre-death transfers if revocable, retained life estates, or reversionary interests over 5% value. Jointly held assets, especially with spouses, receive tailored treatment.

Federal Exemption Levels and Tax Rates

For 2025, the unified lifetime exemption stands at $13.99 million per individual, doubling to nearly $28 million for married couples via portability. This rises to $15 million per person in 2026, indexed for inflation afterward, under current law.

Estates below these thresholds owe no federal tax. Excess amounts face progressive rates from 18% to a flat 40% top marginal rate.

Estate Value Over ExemptionTax Rate
$0 – $10,00018%
$10,001 – $20,00020%
$20,001 – $40,00022%
$40,001 – $60,00024%
$60,001 – $80,00026%
$80,001 – $100,00028%
$100,001 – $150,00030%
$150,001 – $250,00032%
$250,001 – $500,00034%
$500,001 – $750,00037%
$750,001 – $1M39%
Over $1M40%

This structure effectively taxes only the ultra-wealthy; fewer than 0.2% of estates pay federal estate tax annually.

Key Deductions and Exclusions

Reduce your taxable estate through marital deductions (unlimited for U.S. citizen spouses), charitable bequests, and debt/expense offsets. Unlimited spousal transfers defer tax until the surviving partner’s death.

The unified credit absorbs tax on amounts up to the exemption, covering both lifetime gifts and death transfers. Post-1977 adjusted taxable gifts add back to the estate base.

State-Level Estate and Inheritance Taxes

Twelve states plus D.C. impose estate taxes in 2025, with exemptions far below federal levels—e.g., $1 million in Oregon, $13.61 million in Connecticut, $2 million in New York.

Inheritance taxes burden recipients in five states (Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Nebraska, New Jersey, Pennsylvania), with rates varying by beneficiary relation—spouses often exempt, distant kin highest.

StateType2025 Exemption
ConnecticutEstate$13.61M
New YorkEstate$7.16M
OregonEstate$1M
PennsylvaniaInheritanceVaries by heir
New JerseyInheritanceVaries by heir

States decoupled from federal changes post-2017 TCJA, maintaining lower thresholds.

Estate Tax Mechanics: Filing and Payment

The executor files Form 706 if the gross estate exceeds $13.99 million (2025), due nine months post-death, with extensions possible. Taxes pay from estate assets pre-distribution.

Beneficiaries receive stepped-up basis on inherited assets, erasing decedent’s unrealized capital gains tax.

Distinguishing Estate from Inheritance and Gift Taxes

  • Estate Tax: Estate pays on transfers at death (federal/state).
  • Inheritance Tax: Heirs pay on receipts (select states).
  • Gift Tax: Donor pays on lifetime transfers over $18,000 annual exclusion (2025), unified with estate exemption.

Proven Strategies to Minimize Liability

Proactive planning preserves wealth:

  • Annual Gifting: $18,000 per recipient (2025) avoids reporting.
  • Irrevocable Trusts: Remove assets from estate, e.g., ILITs for insurance.
  • Charitable Remainder Trusts: Income stream plus deduction.
  • Family Limited Partnerships: Discounted valuations.
  • 529 Plans/Direct Payments: Education exclusions.

Consult professionals; post-2025 sunset may halve exemptions absent legislation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the estate or heirs pay the tax?

The estate pays before distribution; heirs do not.

Are life insurance proceeds taxable?

Only if decedent owned the policy; otherwise, excluded.

What about jointly owned property?

Includes decedent’s contributed share; spouses get full deduction.

Can estates get extensions?

Yes, up to 6 months for filing, automatic for payment in some cases.

How does step-up in basis work?

Heirs inherit at death-date FMV, minimizing capital gains.

Future Outlook and Planning Urgency

TCJA provisions expire end-2025, potentially dropping exemptions to ~$7M (inflation-adjusted). High-net-worth individuals should act now.

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References

  1. Estate tax in the United States — Wikipedia. 2024. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estate_tax_in_the_United_States
  2. Estate Taxes: Who Pays, How Much and When — U.S. Bank. 2024-10-01. https://www.usbank.com/wealth-management/financial-perspectives/trust-and-estate-planning/estate-taxes.html
  3. What Are Estate and Gift Taxes and How Do They Work? — Peter G. Peterson Foundation. 2024. https://www.pgpf.org/article/what-are-estate-and-gift-taxes-and-how-do-they-work/
  4. Estate tax — Internal Revenue Service. 2025-01-15. https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/estate-tax
  5. Estate tax: What it is, who pays, and current rates — H&R Block. 2024-11-20. https://www.hrblock.com/tax-center/income/other-income/what-is-estate-tax/
  6. How Do State Estate and Inheritance Taxes Work? — Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. 2024-02-12. https://itep.org/how-do-state-estate-and-inheritance-taxes-work/
  7. Frequently asked questions on estate taxes — Internal Revenue Service. 2025-03-01. https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/frequently-asked-questions-on-estate-taxes
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

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