Estate Tax Calculator
Estimate federal estate tax liability.
Estate Information
2024 Federal Estate Tax:
- • Exemption: $13,610,000
- • Tax Rate: 40% on amount above exemption
- • Unlimited marital deduction for U.S. citizen spouses
- • Annual gift tax exclusion: $18,000 per recipient
Total Estate Tax
$356,000.00
Effective tax rate: 2.37%
Gross Estate
$15,000,000.00
Total Deductions
$500,000.00
Taxable Estate
$14,500,000.00
Net Estate
$14,644,000.00
Tax Breakdown
Federal Estate Tax
40% on amount above $13,610,000
$356,000.00
Total Estate Tax
Federal + State
$356,000.00
Estate Distribution
Deductions Applied
Understanding Estate Taxes
- •Federal Exemption ($13.61M): Only estates exceeding this value owe federal estate tax. The exemption is portable between spouses.
- •Unlimited Marital Deduction: Assets passing to a surviving U.S. citizen spouse are completely exempt from estate tax.
- •Charitable Deductions: Donations to qualified charities reduce your taxable estate dollar-for-dollar.
- •State Estate Taxes: Thirteen states and D.C. have their own estate taxes with varying exemptions, typically lower than the federal exemption.
- •Estate Planning: Trusts, gifting strategies, and life insurance can help reduce or eliminate estate tax liability.
Estate Tax Summary
Calculate Your Federal and State Estate Tax Liability
Everything you need to know
An estate tax calculator helps you estimate federal and state tax liability on your estate, enabling strategic planning to minimize taxes and maximize wealth transfer to heirs.
2024 Federal Estate Tax:
- Exemption Amount: $13,610,000 per person
- Tax Rate: 40% on amounts above the exemption
- Portability: Surviving spouses can use deceased spouse's unused exemption
- Sunset Provision: The current high exemption expires after 2025, reverting to approximately $7 million (adjusted for inflation) unless Congress extends it
How It's Calculated:
- Gross Estate: Total value of all assets (real estate, investments, business interests, life insurance, retirement accounts, personal property)
- Deductions: Subtract debts, funeral expenses, administrative costs, charitable bequests, and marital deduction
- Taxable Estate: Gross estate minus deductions
- Tax Owed: (Taxable estate - $13,610,000) × 40%
Example: $20 Million Estate
- Gross estate: $20,000,000
- Less exemption: -$13,610,000
- Taxable amount: $6,390,000
- Federal estate tax: $6,390,000 × 40% = $2,556,000
States with Estate Tax (2024):
- Connecticut: $13.61M exemption, 12% rate
- Hawaii: $5.49M exemption, 10-20% rates
- Illinois: $4M exemption, 8-16% rates
- Maine: $6.41M exemption, 8-12% rates
- Maryland: $5M exemption, 16% rate (also has inheritance tax)
- Massachusetts: $2M exemption, 8-16% rates (lowest exemption)
- Minnesota: $3M exemption, 13-16% rates
- New York: $6.94M exemption, 5-16% rates (cliff tax applies)
- Oregon: $1M exemption, 10-16% rates (lowest exemption)
- Rhode Island: $1.73M exemption, 8-16% rates
- Vermont: $5M exemption, 16% rate
- Washington: $2.19M exemption, 10-20% rates
- District of Columbia: $4.53M exemption, 12-16% rates
Important State Considerations:
- State exemptions are generally much lower than federal
- New York has a "cliff tax" where estates slightly over the exemption can lose the entire exemption
- Some states don't have portability between spouses
- Moving to a no-estate-tax state before death can save significant taxes
Key Features:
- Unlimited Amount: No limit on assets passing to surviving U.S. citizen spouse
- Defers Tax: Doesn't eliminate tax, just postpones it until second spouse's death
- Portability: Surviving spouse can claim deceased spouse's unused exemption ($13.61M × 2 = $27.22M total for married couples)
- Non-Citizen Spouses: Limited to annual amount ($185,000 in 2024) unless using Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT)
Strategic Planning: Instead of leaving everything to your spouse (which wastes your exemption), consider:
- Credit Shelter Trust (Bypass Trust): Fund trust with exemption amount ($13.61M), remainder to spouse
- Benefits: Protects $13.61M from estate tax, provides income to spouse, preserves wealth for children
- Alternative: Use portability election (simpler but less asset protection)
Example: Married Couple with $30M Estate
- Strategy 1 (All to Spouse): First death = $0 tax. Second death = ($30M - $13.61M) × 40% = $6.56M tax
- Strategy 2 (Credit Shelter Trust): First death = $0 tax. Trust holds $13.61M. Second death = ($16.39M - $13.61M) × 40% = $1.11M tax
- Tax Savings: $5.45M saved with proper planning!
Benefits of Charitable Giving:
- Dollar-for-Dollar Reduction: Every dollar to charity reduces taxable estate by one dollar
- No Limits: Unlike income tax charitable deductions, estate tax allows unlimited charitable deductions
- Dual Benefits: Reduces estate tax while supporting causes you care about
- Tax Savings Rate: Effectively 40% federal (plus state rate if applicable)
Calculation Example:
- Estate value: $20,000,000
- Charitable bequest: $2,000,000
- Taxable estate: $20M - $2M - $13.61M exemption = $4.39M
- Tax on $4.39M: $1,756,000
- Without Charity: Tax on $6.39M = $2,556,000
- Tax Savings: $800,000 (equals 40% of $2M donation)
Charitable Giving Strategies:
- Direct Bequest: Specify dollar amount or percentage in will
- Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT): Provides income during life, remainder to charity at death
- Charitable Lead Trust (CLT): Charity receives income for years, remainder to heirs (removes growth from estate)
- Private Foundation: Create lasting family legacy while reducing estate tax
- Donor-Advised Fund: Simple alternative to foundation
Tax Efficiency: If you're charitably inclined and have a taxable estate, giving $1M to charity costs your heirs only $600,000 after tax savings ($1M - 40% tax = $600K net cost).
2024 Gift Tax Rules:
- Annual Exclusion: $18,000 per recipient per year (tax-free, no reporting required)
- Unlimited Recipients: Can gift $18,000 to as many people as you want
- Married Couples: Can combine exclusions for $36,000 per recipient
- Lifetime Exemption: Same as estate tax exemption ($13,610,000)
- Gift Splitting: Married couples can elect to split gifts (each spouse uses half their exemption)
What Doesn't Count Against Annual Exclusion:
- Direct payment of medical expenses to provider
- Direct payment of tuition to educational institution
- Gifts to spouses (unlimited marital deduction)
- Gifts to political organizations
- Gifts to qualified charities
Strategic Annual Gifting: A married couple with 3 children and 6 grandchildren can gift:
- 9 recipients × $36,000 = $324,000 per year tax-free
- Over 10 years: $3,240,000 removed from estate
- Estate tax saved: $3.24M × 40% = $1,296,000
Important Considerations:
- Gifts over $18,000 per person require filing Form 709
- Excess gifts reduce your lifetime exemption
- Using exemption now vs. at death may be strategic (assets appreciate outside your estate)
- Estate tax exemption may decrease after 2025, making gifting more valuable
When GSTT Applies:
- Direct Skip: Gift or bequest directly to grandchild while parent is alive
- Taxable Distribution: Distribution from trust to skip person
- Taxable Termination: Trust interest passes to skip person
GSTT Exemption (2024): $13,610,000 (same as estate tax exemption)
Avoiding GSTT:
- Use your GSTT exemption strategically on assets with high growth potential
- Create dynasty trusts to benefit multiple generations
- Consider generation-skipping trust planning
- Time gifts to grandchildren (annual exclusion still applies)
Example Without Planning:
- $10M transfer to grandchildren
- Estate tax (if over exemption): $4M × 40% = $1.6M
- GSTT on same amount: $4M × 40% = $1.6M
- Total tax: $3.2M (80%!) on amount over exemptions
With Proper Planning:
- Allocate GSTT exemption to transfers
- Use annual exclusion gifts to grandchildren
- Create GST-exempt trusts
- Potential tax savings: Millions
Basic Strategies:
- Annual Exclusion Gifts: $18,000 per person per year removes assets from estate
- Pay Medical/Education Costs: Direct payments don't count as gifts
- Lifetime Exemption Gifts: Use exemption now so appreciation occurs outside estate
- Marital Planning: Use credit shelter trusts to maximize both spouses' exemptions
- State Planning: Consider moving to no-estate-tax state if substantial state tax
Advanced Strategies:
- Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT): Transfer assets but retain annuity payments; excess growth passes tax-free to heirs
- Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT): Transfer home to children at reduced value, continue living there
- Family Limited Partnership (FLP): Transfer business/investments at discounted value due to lack of control/marketability
- Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust (IDGT): Freeze estate value, appreciation benefits heirs
- Life Insurance Trust (ILIT): Keep life insurance proceeds out of taxable estate
- Charitable Trusts: Combine charitable giving with family benefits
Valuation Discounts:
- Minority interest discounts (10-40%)
- Lack of marketability discounts (15-35%)
- Can reduce taxable estate value significantly for business interests
Life Insurance Planning:
- $10M taxable estate, $5M life insurance
- Without ILIT: ($15M - $13.61M) × 40% = $556,000 tax
- With ILIT: Insurance outside estate, ($10M - $13.61M) = $0 tax
- Tax savings: $556,000
When to Start Planning: The best time is NOW. Estate planning takes years to implement effectively, and some strategies require surviving a certain period after implementation. Waiting until illness or old age limits your options.
Life Insurance:
- Included in Estate: If you own the policy at death
- Exclusion Strategy: Transfer ownership to Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) at least 3 years before death
- Incident of Ownership: Any control over policy causes inclusion
- Benefit: ILIT owns policy, pays estate taxes with insurance proceeds, preserves other assets for heirs
Retirement Accounts (IRA, 401k, etc.):
- Estate Tax: Full account value included in taxable estate
- Income Tax: Heirs also pay income tax on distributions
- Double Tax: Can face 40% estate tax + up to 37% income tax = 77% combined (though estate tax is deductible for income tax purposes, effective rate ~65%)
- Strategic Withdrawal: Consider Roth conversions before death (pay income tax now, heirs receive tax-free)
Roth IRA Advantages:
- Still included in estate (pays 40% estate tax)
- But heirs receive distributions income-tax-free
- Better than traditional IRA for estate planning
Example: $2M IRA
- Estate tax: $2M × 40% = $800,000 (if over exemption)
- Remaining: $1,200,000
- Heir income tax: $1.2M × 35% = $420,000
- Net to heirs: $780,000 (61% tax rate)
Better Strategy: Charitable Remainder Leave retirement accounts to charity (estate tax deductible, charity pays no income tax), use life insurance in ILIT to replace value to heirs income and estate tax-free.
Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes. Estate tax laws are complex and vary by state. The federal exemption is scheduled to decrease after 2025. Actual tax liability depends on many factors including asset valuation, deductions, prior gifts, and state law. Consult an estate planning attorney and tax professional for personalized advice. This calculator does not constitute legal or financial advice.
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