No Stepped-Up Basis for Estate
Inheritors of Those Dying in 2010
By Shane Flait © 2009
Up until 2010, property owned by a
decedent at the time of death of his
death had its tax basis changed from
what the decedent’s basis was to its
fair market value – whichever was
higher. For the year 2010 – and only
that year – the law has been changed
to ‘whatever is lower’.
This change will generally cost
inheritors of decedents who die in
2010 more taxes down the line –
especially for those inheriting
houses. Here’s why.
Over the long run, most equities
tend to increase in value. The owner
of an equity property has a tax
basis in it that’s usually the price
he paid for it. As time goes on,
with all things being equal, the
fair market values of equities tend
to increase – if only by the effects
of inflation.
A prime example is a house.
Typically a house owned by a
decedent at his death has a tax
basis to him that’s considerably
less than its fair market value at
the time of his death. In that case,
an inheritor of a house from a
decedent dying in 2009 had the
house’s tax basis stepped-up to its
fair market value.
That means if he sold the house
right away, at its fair market
value, he’d have no capital gain tax
to be paid since the selling price
equalled the it’s tax basis (stepped
up to the fair market value). The
stepped up basis would always
benefit him no matter when he sold,
too.
But now, under the same situation
but for the decedent dying in 2010,
the inherited house received by the
inheritor with the same tax basis as
it had in the hands of the deceased.
That’s because, according to the
2010 law, the lesser (and not the
greater) of the fair market value or
the decedent’s basis becomes the
inheritors basis.
So if the inheritor sold it right
away or sometime in the future, he’d
have a capital gain tax to pay based
on the extent to which the selling
price’s fair market value exceeds
the decedent’s considerably lower
tax basis.
This law change comes from the
Economic Growth and Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA).
It provided for the repeal the law
which gave the ‘whichever was
greater’ provision at death for the
change in tax basis for those dying
after 2009. But remember, EGTRRA
also eliminated all estate taxation
for 2010. It was hoped that in 2001,
we wouldn’t need the estate tax
after 2009.
Fortunately, the ‘whichever is less’
provision should be in effect for
estates of those dying during 2010
only. Presumably, legislators will
get their act together during this
year and arrange to bring back the
usual ‘stepped-up basis’
(corresponding to ‘whichever is
greater’) that estate property
received.
Unfortunately their actions will
most likely bring back the estate
tax with it too.
Shane Flait is a writer and
educator. See more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com