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06/18/2025
The U.S. is Giving up on Taxing Inheritances
The GOP tax bill is set to weaken the estate tax even more
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 TCJA 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.
Please select this link to read the complete article from The Washington Post.