Estate Tax

Tax Planning
Updated Apr 2026

A federal tax on the transfer of wealth from a deceased person's estate to their heirs.

Tax laws change annually and vary by country. The information on this page is for educational purposes only. Always verify figures with current official sources (IRS, HMRC, CRA, ATO) and consult a qualified tax professional before making any tax-related decision.

What is Estate Tax?

The federal estate tax is a tax on the right to transfer property upon death. It applies to the taxable estate — total assets minus debts and deductions — above the federal exemption threshold. For 2025, the exemption is $13.99 million per individual (or $27.98 million for a married couple). Estates above this threshold pay rates up to 40%. Most Americans are unaffected due to the high exemption. The exemption is scheduled to revert to roughly $7 million (inflation-adjusted) in 2026 when the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions expire, unless Congress acts. Some states impose their own estate or inheritance taxes with lower thresholds.

Example

Example

A single individual dies in 2025 with a taxable estate worth $20 million. After the $13.99 million federal exemption, $6.01 million is subject to estate tax. At a 40% top rate, the estate owes approximately $2.4 million in federal estate tax — money typically paid before assets are distributed to heirs.

Source: IRS — Estate Tax