Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are married, you can each give $18k a year to her. If she’s married, you can both give $36k to her and her spouse. If more, you’d just have to fill out a firm.
This. Anything over $18K yearly gift has to be accounted for with IRS and goes against your lifetime exemption (currently $13M, will sunset to $5.something in 2025 or 2026).
This. It’s on the political chopping block.
It had better be. $5m is nothing with this inflation. A house is $3m now a beach house $5m.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are married, you can each give $18k a year to her. If she’s married, you can both give $36k to her and her spouse. If more, you’d just have to fill out a firm.
This. Anything over $18K yearly gift has to be accounted for with IRS and goes against your lifetime exemption (currently $13M, will sunset to $5.something in 2025 or 2026).
This. It’s on the political chopping block.
Anonymous wrote:This question comes up a lot. Here are the rules:
1. Any one individual can give any other individual up to $18k in a calendar year (as of 2024) without any reporting required. Yes that means a married couple can give one of their children a total of $36k, and then another $36k to their child's spouse. This $18k annual amount is called the gift tax exclusion. You can give this amount and there are zero tax implications.
2. If you give more than $18k in a year to one individual, you have to fill out IRS Form 709 as part of your tax return for the year you gave the large gift. This is a form to track how much you are giving over the course of a persons lifetime. Note that this does NOT mean you owe taxes on the amount above $18k. That only comes into play if:
3. You give an individual more than $13 million over the course of their life, as indicated by totaling the amounts on your Form 709s over the years. Once you cross that threshold, you owe 40% taxes on the amounts above it, including from your estate.
Form 709 is a 5 page form, it's a bit complicated. All regular tax software will be able to fill it out for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are married, you can each give $18k a year to her. If she’s married, you can both give $36k to her and her spouse. If more, you’d just have to fill out a firm.
This. Anything over $18K yearly gift has to be accounted for with IRS and goes against your lifetime exemption (currently $13M, will sunset to $5.something in 2025 or 2026).
This. It’s on the political chopping block.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do $18k per person. Out inlwas did thst. FIL gave me and DH $18k and then MIL $18k each. Thats $54k
Isn’t that $72K?