inheritance tax
- ️Thu Jul 08 2010
n.
A tax imposed on the privilege of receiving property by inheritance or legal succession and assessed on the value of the property received. Also called death tax.
For a list of words related to inheritance tax, see:
Levy on the property accruing to each beneficiary of the estate of a deceased person. Inheritance tax may be more difficult to administer than estate tax because the value passing to each beneficiary must be fixed, and this often requires complex actuarial calculations. Inheritance taxes date back to the Roman Empire. In the U.S. inheritance taxes have always been collected by the individual states, while the federal government has imposed an estate tax. The first state inheritance tax was imposed by Pennsylvania in 1826.
For more information on inheritance tax, visit Britannica.com.
In some states in the U.S. (and in the United Kingdom), a tax imposed on those who inherit assets from a deceased person. The tax rate for inheritance taxes depends on the value of the property received by the heir or beneficiary and his/her relationship to the decedent.
Inheritance tax is known in some countries as a "death duty" and is occasionally called "the last twist of the taxman's knife".
Investopedia Says:
Inheritance tax is not the same as estate tax, which is imposed on the total value of a person's estate when that person dies. Rather, inheritance tax is imposed on the property that is passed to an heir.
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State tax based on the value of property passing to each particular heir. It differs from the federal estate tax in that the degree of kinship of the heir to the decedent generally determines the exempt amounts and tax rates. An Estate Tax is based on the value of all property left by the decedent, whereas an inheritance tax is based on the amount that an heir receives. See also Unified Estate and Gift Tax.
A tax, based on property Value imposed in some states on those who acquire property from a decedent. Compare Estate Tax.
Example: An estate tax is based on the value of all property left by the decedent, whereas an inheritance tax is based on the amount that an Heir receives.
inheritance tax, assessment made on the portion of an estate received by an individual; it differs from an estate tax, which is a tax levied on an entire estate before it is distributed to individuals. The inheritance tax is usually progressive and is determined by the amount of property received by the beneficiary, as well as by his or her relationship to the deceased. Strictly speaking, it is a tax on the right to receive the property; the estate tax can be characterized as a tax on the right to transmit the property. All states impose either an estate tax or an inheritance tax, some states employing both. A related federal levy is the gift tax, designed to prevent people from avoiding inheritance and estate taxes by giving away property before death.
In the United States, the federal government levied inheritance taxes during the Civil War period and again during the Spanish-American War; since 1916, however, a progressive estate tax has been imposed. The U.S. tax law of 1981 greatly reduced estate and gift taxes by raising exemptions (from $175,000 to $600,000) and lowering rates, and a 2001 law calls phase out the federal estate tax by 2012; estate taxes in 40 states that are based on the federal tax credit for state estate taxes would be phased out in 2006.
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An inheritance tax (also known as an estate tax) is a tax levied on a person who inherits money or property, or a tax on the estate (total value of the money and property), of a person who has died.[1] In international tax law, there is a distinction between an estate tax and an inheritance tax: an estate tax taxes the personal representatives of the deceased, while an inheritance tax taxes the beneficiaries of the estate. However this distinction is not always respected. For example, the "inheritance tax" in the UK is a tax on personal representatives, and is therefore, strictly speaking, an estate tax.
- In some jurisdictions, such taxes are known as inheritance tax:
- The Republic of Ireland (where it is a tax on beneficiaries).
- The United Kingdom: see Inheritance tax (United Kingdom).
- Some states of the United States: see Inheritance tax at the state level:
- IA - Iowa
- In Iowa, inheritance is exempt if passed to a surviving spouse, children, grandchildren, parents, grandparents, or other "lineal" descendants. Other recipients are subject to inheritance tax, with rates varying depending on the relationship of the recipient to the deceased.[2]
- IN - Indiana[citation needed]
- KY - Kentucky
- In Kentucky, the inheritance tax is a tax on a beneficiary's right to receive property from a decedent's estate. It is imposed as a percentage of the amount transferred to the beneficiary. Currently, transfers to "Class A" relatives—spouses, parents, children, grandchildren, and siblings—are exempt from inheritance tax. Transfers to "Class B" relatives—nieces, nephews, daughters- and sons-in-law, aunts, uncles, and great-grandchildren—are taxed at a lower rate than transfers to "Class C" recipients, defined as anyone not falling within Class A or B.[3]
- MD - Maryland[citation needed]
- NE - Nebraska[citation needed]
- NJ - New Jersey[citation needed]
- OK - Oklahoma[citation needed]
- PA - Pennsylvania[4]
- TN - Tennessee[citation needed]
- IA - Iowa
- In some jurisdictions the term used is estate tax:
- The United States: see Estate tax in the United States.
- Many states within the United States. Kentucky imposes an estate tax in addition to its inheritance tax.[3]
- The United States: see Estate tax in the United States.
- In some jurisdictions the term used is death duty, and for historical reasons that term is used colloquially - although it is no longer correct legally - in the United Kingdom and some Commonwealth nations.
- In some jurisdictions the term is estate duty:
- Hong Kong. See Estate Duty Ordinance Cap.111. The tax was effectively abolished in 2006 by limiting its application to deaths occurring before 11 February 2006.
- In some jurisdictions, death gives rise to a charge to stamp duty:
- In some jurisdictions, death gives rise to a charge to capital gains tax:
- Canada. See Taxation in Canada.
-
- Where a jurisdiction has capital gains tax and inheritance tax (for example the United Kingdom) it is usual to exempt death from the capital gains tax.
- In some jurisdictions death gives rise to the local equivalent of gift tax (see Austria, below, for example). This was the model in the United Kingdom during the period before the introduction of Inheritance Tax in 1986, where estates were charged to a form of gift tax called Capital Transfer Tax. Where a jurisdiction has a gift tax and an estate tax (for example the United States at federal level) it is usual to exempt death from the gift tax. Also, it is common for inheritance taxes to share some features of gift taxes, by taxing some transfers which happen during lifetime rather than on death. The United Kingdom, for example, taxes "lifetime chargeable transfers" (usually gifts to trusts) to inheritance tax.
- Non-English speaking jurisdictions naturally use non-English terminology:
- Belgium, a multilingual nation, uses the terms droits de succession ("rights of succession") and successierechten, taxes on beneficiaries which are collected at the federal level but distributed to the regional level.
- Czech Republic charges daň dědická, taxes on beneficiaries.
- Finland has perintövero (Finnish) or arvskatt (Swedish)
- France uses the term droits de succession ("rights of succession"), taxes on beneficiaries.
- Germany charges Erbschaftssteuer, a tax on beneficiaries.
- Italy initially abolished its tassa di successione in 2001,[5] then re-introduced it for large estates in 2006. The exempt amount in the case of spouse and children is Euro 1,000,000 each. Maximum rate is 8%.[6][7]
- Israel abolished its inheritance tax in 1981.
- The Netherlands charges successierecht, a tax on beneficiaries.
- Norway has arveavgift (inheritance and gift tax), with a zero rate up to a lower treshold. From this level, the rates range from 6 % to 15 % depending on the status of the beneficiary and the size of the taxable amount. See Taxation in Norway.
- Switzerland has no Erbschaftssteuer / impôt successoral / imposta di successione at national level. However in the various cantons, three possibilities (a tax on the estate, a tax on the beneficiaries, or no tax) exist.
- Some jurisdictions have never had estate or inheritance taxes, or have abolished them:
- Austria abolished the Erbschaftssteuer in 2008. This tax had some of the features of the gift tax, which was abolished at the same time.[8]
- Australia abolished the estate tax federally in 1979.[9]
- New Zealand abolished estate duty in 1992.
- Russia abolished inheritance tax in 2006.
- Sweden abolished estate tax in 2005.[10]
- India enforced estate duty from 1953 to 1985. Estate Duty Act, 1953 came into existence w.e.f. 15 Oct 1953 till E.D.(Amendment) Act 1985 discontinued levy of estate duty on deaths occurring on or after 16 Mar 1985.
- British Virgin Islands
- Gibraltar[11]
- Singapore abolished estate tax in 2008, for deaths occurring on or after 15 Feb 2008[12][13]
- Some states of the United States: see Inheritance tax at the state level:
- LA - Louisiana - In place through 2003
- NH - New Hampshire - In place through 2003
See also
References
- ^ Sullivan, arthur; Steven M. Sheffrin (2003). Economics: Principles in action. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458: Pearson Prentice Hall. pp. 358. ISBN 0-13-063085-3. http://www.pearsonschool.com/index.cfm?locator=PSZ3R9&PMDbSiteId=2781&PMDbSolutionId=6724&PMDbCategoryId=&PMDbProgramId=12881&level=4.
- ^ "Iowa Department of Revenue: - Iowa Taxes". 2010-07-08. http://www.iowa.gov/tax/educate/78517.html.
- ^ a b "A Guide to Kentucky Inheritance and Estate Taxes: General Information". Kentucky Revenue Cabinet. March 2003. http://revenue.ky.gov/NR/rdonlyres/6D844DC9-B300-4EE7-963E-DB141FC0AED6/0/guide_2003.pdf. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
- ^ http://www.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/inheritance_tax/11414
- ^ camera.it
- ^ delgiudice.clara.net
- ^ parlamento.it
- ^ http://vorarlberg.orf.at/stories/176790/
- ^ http://www.taxfoundation.org/blog/show/1678.html
- ^ guardian.co.uk
- ^ Hassans International - Tax
- ^ iras.gov.sg
- ^ singaporebudget.gov.sg
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