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by gnicholas
1258 days ago
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Former (US) tax lawyer here. You can give up to the maximum allowable gift amount each year, to each of your parents. If you are married, your spouse can do the same (for your parents and their own). This year, the annual gift amount is $17,000, which means you can give up to double that ($34k), and you + spouse can give up to quadruple that ($68k) to your parents. I never worked on this type of matter directly (I was on the corporate side, not personal), but IIRC there is a form you can fill out to make one gift and have it tap both your and your spouse's gift amounts. But if you're just doing checks, you can easily make them out in four separate checks. The form is useful if you're giving them a car or painting that is below the $68k but above the individual-to-individual gift amounts. 1: https://www.morganlewis.com/pubs/2022/10/irs-announces-incre... |
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Not a tax lawyer, ever, but I know the part that is missing in this statement: “without incurring any immediate or future tax liability [0] or immediate reporting requirement.” If you exceed the per-donor per-recipient limit, you have to file a gift tax return, and the gift counts against your lifetime exemption limit (currently $12.92 million, but also indexed annually by inflation.) If your total lifetime reportable gifts ever exceed that, you’ll have to pay gift tax on the reportable gifts over the limit, and if yiur estate exceeds whatever is left ofnyour exemption when you die, your estate will pay estate tax.
[0] barring a future but retrospective change to tax law, which is theoretically possible but impossible to plan around.