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by Ilyce Glink, Inman News Inherit property next year and save? In other words, you inherit the property at the current market value on the day of the owner’s death. So, if you turn around and sell it for the price that is the current market value, you wouldn’t owe any taxes on the property. Another columnist wrote that the stepped-up-basis tax law will expire in 2010, and that you would inherit property at the owner’s current basis. If you sold the property, you would then pay capital gains tax on the difference between the decedent’s cost basis and the current market value. Confused? According to Chet Burgess, an enrolled agent who owns Brookwood Tax Service in Atlanta, as the law currently stands, the basis step-up would expire with the estate tax, which is also set to expire in 2010. However, President Obama has already made it clear he will not allow the estate tax to expire, and is proposing to hold the estate tax exemption and tax rates at or close to their current amounts. If he succeeds in that effort, he generally is expected to maintain the basis step-up. President Obama has indicated that he would support freezing the current estate tax exemption at $3.5 million per person, or $7 million for a married couple. Next year, the estate tax exemption is scheduled to fall to zero, meaning you can inherit any amount estate tax-free. The exemption is currently expected to resume at $1 million in 2011. Burgess said that since an extension of the current estate tax laws has not yet been brought up for a vote in either house, figuring out what will happent would be pure speculation at this point. To contact the writer, click the byline at the top of the story Copyright 2009 Ilyce R. Glink. See Ilyce Glink’s feature, 10 Years to Retire? Go Refi. Share your insights by commenting below. For questions about our blog, contact our editor at kim@joinaaoa.org. American Apartment Owners Association offers discounts for landlords on products and services related to your rental investment, including real estate forms, tenant debt collection, tenant background checks, insurance and financing. Find out more at www.joinaaoa.org. To subscribe to our blog, click here. Posted on Monday, April 27th, 2009 at 8:13 am and is filed under AAOA Forum, Financing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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2 Responses to “2010: The Year of No Estate Tax?”
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Please I need information about recovering the past tenants’ rents being owed.
Thanks for your quick response.
Margaret
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