Sat. Jul 12th, 2025

The U.S. is giving up on taxing inheritances – The Death Tax Repeal Act of 2025: What You Need to Know

Congressional Republicans are proposing to permanently allow wealthy families to pass on more of their assets tax-free, as the federal government all but abandons taxing large inheritances.

Under current law, estates pay tax only on transfers above $13.99 million for single filers and $27.98 million for married couples. Those thresholds, doubled by President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax law, are scheduled to fall by roughly half at the end of 2025. But in the tax bill before Congress, both the House and Senate versions would raise the exemption starting next year to $15 million for individuals and $30 million for couples, then set them to adjust for inflation in the future.

Though they represent a small part of the overall costs of Trump’s tax bill, these changes are set to weaken an estate tax that already affects fewer households than it has in decades. When the federal estate tax was first imposed in 1934, roughly 8,600 deaths resulted in estate tax liability, or 0.9 percent of adult deaths. In 2019, the most recent year for which IRS data is available, only 2,100 deaths resulted in estate tax liability, or 0.08 percent of deaths. The proposed increases are expected to reduce that share even more.

“The estate tax is barely hanging on right now,” said Steve Wamhoff, federal policy director at the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. “This bill would make sure it almost disappears.”

The estate tax has proved divisive in Washington, as Republicans have for years sought its eradication. When someone dies, their assets become an estate. For 2025, only the portion of an estate above $13.99 million per person — a limit that also absorbs any large gifts made while someone is alive — is subject to the federal estate tax, and only the value over the exemption is taxed, at rates that top out at 40 percent. Twelve states and D.C. impose their own estate or inheritance taxes with lower thresholds and a variety of rates.

While the tax’s defenders say it is necessary to curb dynastic wealth at a time of rising inequality, conservatives have long argued the policy unfairly hits the same taxpayer twice because it taxes assets that were originally accumulated after their owners paid income taxes. Levies on consumption, many economists say, are more effective and efficient ways to make the tax code fairer.

The provision raising the limit is not considered controversial among Republicans and is expected to pass without dissent among the GOP ranks in either the House or Senate. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota), who has sponsored Senate legislation to outright repeal what Republicans call “the death tax,” has said doing so is necessary to prevent cash-poor firms, including family farms, from selling off equipment or land to pay the tax.

The estate tax changes in the current GOP tax bill will cost the federal government roughly $210 billion over the next 10 years, according to the nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation.

“It’s a tax on savings, and there’s a double-taxation issue — you earn the money, you paid taxes, and then the government comes after you again when you die,” said Michael Strain, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute, a center-right think tank. Strain said that the levy “creates weird perversities: Two people who know they’re going to die — one buys cocaine and goes to Vegas and gambles and pays no tax, the other gives money to kids and pays the tax.”

Several decades of GOP influence on federal policymaking have whittled down the estate tax. Before President George W. Bush’s 2001 tax cuts, about 2 percent of estates paid the levy, far more than do now. Even those estates who do owe the tax often reduce or eliminate their liability, said Howard Gleckman, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, through trusts, valuation discounts and life-insurance strategies.

Republicans under Bush sought to eliminate the estate tax, but because of Senate rules settled for merely shrinking it — a strategy the party has replicated under Trump.

“Having an estate tax that affects so few heirs allows this massive intergenerational transfer of wealth that keeps the rich richer and gives them the opportunity to get even richer,” Gleckman said.

The effects of the weaker estate tax on inequality are hard to measure. But federal data suggests that inequality has broadly continued to rise: The average wealth of a family in the top 10 percent soared from roughly $3 million in 1989 to more than $9 million in 2022, according to the latest nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office report. Over the same period of time, those in the bottom 10 percent found their average wealth rising from $27,000 to $74,000, the report found.

“The estate tax is one of the few federal policies that can slow down the growing wealth gap and this enormous growth in inequality,” said Wamhoff, of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. “We’re basically not taxing generational wealth at all right now.” source


The Death Tax Repeal Act of 2025: What You Need to Know

On February 13, 2025, Republican lawmakers in the House of Representatives and the Senate introduced the Death Tax Repeal Act (the “Act”). The Act aims to permanently eliminate the federal estate tax, often referred to as the “death tax,” and would significantly alter the future landscape of estate taxation. Variations of the Act have been introduced in Congress each year since 2015 but have failed to become law each time. However, with each reintroduction, support of such legislation has consistently increased year over year.

Background

The Internal Revenue Code (the ”Code”) currently imposes tax on an individual’s right to transfer property to others, both during life and at death. For transfers of property during life, the federal gift tax is imposed at a rate of 40%. For transfers of property at death, the federal estate tax is also imposed at a rate of 40%. However, the Code provides each individual with what is known as the “unified credit,” allowing each individual to transfer a certain value of assets tax-free during their lifetime or at their death. In 2025,  the unified credit is $13,990,000. Any amounts transferred in excess of this $13,990,000 figure, either during life or at death, are subject to the 40% tax.

The Code imposes an additional tax, known as the federal generation-skipping transfer tax (“GST Tax”), on transfers to individuals who are in a generation two or more below the transferor, whether those transfers are made during life or at death. However, the Code also provides each individual with an “exemption,” or tax-free amount, before the 40% GST Tax applies. That exemption is currently equal to the unified credit amount of $13,990,000.

Currently, the unified credit and exemption are at an all-time high. Under the first Trump administration, the unified credit and exemption were doubled as a result of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the “TCJA”). The TCJA has a sunset date of January 1, 2026. This means if no action is taken to extend the TCJA, the unified credit and exemption will return to their pre-TCJA level on January 1, 2026, effectively cutting the current unified credit and exemption in half. If the TCJA does sunset, the unified credit and exemption available to individuals in 2026 will be approximately $7,000,000.

Key Provisions of the Death Tax Repeal Act

  1. Permanent Repeal of the Estate Tax and GST Tax: The Act would permanently eliminate the federal estate tax and GST Tax, allowing individuals passing away after adoption of the Act to transfer an unlimited amount of property at death free of tax.
  2. Permanent Gift Tax Exemption and Reduced Gift Tax Rate: The Act would impose a permanent lifetime gift tax exemption of $10,000,000, as adjusted for inflation (adjusted to $13,990,000 in 2025). Effectively, the current unified credit for gift tax would become permanent and would only be used for transfers made during life, as transfers at death would be free of tax as outlined above. Transfers made during life in excess of this exemption would be subject to a reduced 35% tax rate.
  3. Retention of the Step-Up in Basis: The Act would maintain the current “basis adjustment” that occurs at death. In other words, if an individual dies owning appreciated assets, those assets would receive a full “step-up” in basis to the date of death fair market value. This would allow beneficiaries to minimize capital gains taxes upon the subsequent sale of any inherited asset.

Passage of the Act could have a significant impact on estate and wealth transfer planning efforts. source

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