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by henrikschroder
1257 days ago
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> I wouldn't characterize GP as "pretty much wrong" — I would say that one line left out that it's an annual gift limit. GP said that gifts are taxed if you exceed the annual limit, and this is 100% wrong. The only way you can be taxed on gifts is by exceeding the lifetime limit. The annual limit determines if you need to report your gift to the IRS or not, but nothing else. If you stay below the annual limit every year, you will never exceed the lifetime limit, unless you and the recipient live to 140 or something, so the different limits are related, but that's it. |
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It can lead to problems with your estate when you die, and result in penalties and interest (from the date of the gift). See https://www.forbes.com/sites/bobcarlson/2022/02/24/avoid-the...
> If you stay below the annual limit every year, you will never exceed the lifetime limit, unless you and the recipient live to 140 or something, so the different limits are related, but that's it.
Actually, if you stay below the annual gift limit every year, you can never exceed the lifetime limit. Only gifts in excess of the annual limit count toward the lifetime amount.