LdiJ
Senior Member
No, there would not be any other forms to submit.Many thanks, appreciate.
This forum, specifically Tax sub-forum, is a valuable resource for people looking for advise!
Do I or John need to submit any other tax forms?
No, there would not be any other forms to submit.Many thanks, appreciate.
This forum, specifically Tax sub-forum, is a valuable resource for people looking for advise!
Do I or John need to submit any other tax forms?
Under federal tax law, if the total of all the gifts you give to another individual during a single year exceeds $14,000 you must file a federal gift tax return, Form 709. The $14,000 is the federal gift tax exclusion amount. The excess gifts over the $14,000 exclusion is the amount of the gift subject to gift tax, so here the taxable gift is $6,000 (unless you are married and you and your spouse elect to split this gift). The taxable gift first reduces your lifetime unified credit against federal and estate taxes. That credit stands at $5.49 million and goes up a bit each year as it gets indexed every year for inflation. (The $14,000 gift tax exclusion will also eventually get raised for inflation too.) So until you give taxable gifts over your lifetime that exceed the unified credit you pay no federal estate tax. Instead, the taxable gifts just reduce the unified credit, though you still must file a Form 709 to report the taxable gifts. Any unified credit you have left when you die is available to your estate to apply against the federal estate tax.I gave $20,000 to my 50 year old brother as gift in the year 2017. This is the first ever gift I gave him. Do I or my brother need to report this in our 2017 tax returns?
Please note that all the gift amounts together that I ever gave in my lifetime (until now) to all persons together did not exceed $100,000.
If the 20k that you gifted your brother came from a joint bank account you could legitimately consider it a joint gift from you and your wife, with each of you gifting 10k. In that scenario you would not have to file a gift tax return.I gave $20,000 to my 50 year old brother as gift in the year 2017. This is the first ever gift I gave him. Do I or my brother need to report this in our 2017 tax returns?
Please note that all the gift amounts together that I ever gave in my lifetime (until now) to all persons together did not exceed $100,000.
henrick lives in Florida.Under federal tax law, if the total of all the gifts you give to another individual during a single year exceeds $14,000 you must file a federal gift tax return, Form 709. The $14,000 is the federal gift tax exclusion amount. The excess gifts over the $14,000 exclusion is the amount of the gift subject to gift tax, so here the taxable gift is $6,000 (unless you are married and you and your spouse elect to split this gift). The taxable gift first reduces your lifetime unified credit against federal and estate taxes. That credit stands at $5.49 million and goes up a bit each year as it gets indexed every year for inflation. (The $14,000 gift tax exclusion will also eventually get raised for inflation too.) So until you give taxable gifts over your lifetime that exceed the unified credit you pay no federal estate tax. Instead, the taxable gifts just reduce the unified credit, though you still must file a Form 709 to report the taxable gifts. Any unified credit you have left when you die is available to your estate to apply against the federal estate tax.
A very few states have their own gift taxes, and the rules for those state gift taxes are much different than the federal rule. As I do not know in what state you live I do not know if this gift might be subject to a state gift tax.
No state death or gift taxes in Florida.henrick lives in Florida.