The Gift Tax Made Simple

If you make large enough gifts to relatives or friends, you might owe the federal gift tax. Here are the basics on how the gift tax works.

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Friends giving gifts at a baby shower.

Those affected by Hurricane Beryl in Texas and Hurricane Debby in some states in the Southeastern United States have more time to file federal tax returns and make certain tax payments. The additional time allowed by the IRS includes tax returns that were extended by the original April 15, 2024, deadline as well as certain payments that are normally due after the storms impacted these people. The IRS news release regarding Hurricane Beryl provides details for more information on the extensions for those impacted in Texas while the IRS news releases regarding Hurricane Debby provides details about those impacted in the Eastern U.S.

Key Takeaways

What is the gift tax?

The gift tax is a federal tax that the IRS imposes on people that gift property . The gift tax is applicable when you receive nothing in exchange, or receive compensation that’s less than the property's full value.

This can include, but isn’t limited to:

Note that whether or not you intend for the property to be a gift, the gift tax applies if you don’t receive full compensation for the property that’s been given.

Which gifts are exempt from the federal gift tax?

The following types of gifts are some examples of gifts that are exempt from the federal gift tax. You can make unlimited gifts in these categories without any gift tax or estate tax consequences and without having to file gift tax returns:

How much is the gift tax?

The gift tax rate only applies to gift amounts exceeding the lifetime exclusion limit, which is $12.92M for the 2023 tax year.

The IRS gift tax rate is a marginal rate, meaning the rate increases as the total amount you’ve gifted for the year increases. This is similar to how income tax rates work.

The gift tax is applied based on brackets. For example, $0 to $10,000 over the lifetime exclusion limit is taxed at the lowest gift tax rate, while each incremental bracket is taxed at a higher and higher tax rate.

The gift tax rate currently ranges up to 40%, with anything gifted over the lifetime exclusion limit being taxed at 40%.

Who pays the gift tax?

The gift tax only kicks in after lifetime gifts exceed $12.92 million in 2023.

The first thing to know about the federal gift tax is that gift givers—not gift recipients—have to pay it. Thankfully, you won’t owe the tax until you’ve given away more than your lifetime limit plus the annual limit in cash or other assets during your lifetime.

So, actually owing the gift tax isn't a concern for most folks. But you may still have to file gift tax returns even though you don’t owe any taxes.

How much can you give tax free?

The annual gift tax exclusion provides additional shelter.

The annual federal gift tax exclusion allows you to give away up to $17,000 each in 2023 to as many people as you wish without those gifts counting against your $12.92 million lifetime exemption. (After 2023, the $17,000 exclusion may be increased for inflation.)

Say you give two favored relatives $21,000 each in 2023 and give another relative $10,000. The $21,000 gifts are called taxable gifts because they exceed the $17,000 annual exclusion. But you won’t actually owe any gift tax unless you’ve exhausted your lifetime exemption amount.