As I illustrate below, taxpayers can transfer substantial amounts free of gift taxes to their children or
other donees through the proper use of this exclusion.

The statutory exclusion amount ($10,000) is adjusted for inflation annually, using 1997 as the base
year. The amount of the exclusion for 2017 is $14,000.  The amount of the exclusion for 2017 is $15,000.

The exclusion covers gifts an individual makes to each donee each year. Thus, in 2017 a taxpayer with three
children can transfer a total of $42,000 to them every year free of federal gift taxes. If the only gifts
made during a year are excluded in this fashion, there is no need to file a federal gift tax return. If
annual gifts exceed $14,000, the exclusion covers the first $14,000 and only the excess is taxable.
Further, even taxable gifts may result in no gift tax liability thanks to the unified credit (discussed
below). (Note, this discussion is not relevant to gifts made by a donor to his spouse because these
gifts are gift tax-free under separate marital deduction rules.)

Gift-splitting by married taxpayers. If the donor of the gift is married, gifts to donees made during
a year can be treated as split between the husband and wife, even if the cash or gift property is
actually given to a donee by only one of them. By gift-splitting, therefore, up to $28,000 a year can
be transferred to each donee by a married couple because their two annual exclusions are available.
Thus, for example, a married couple with three married children can transfer a total of $168,000
each year to their children and the children’s spouses ($28,000 for each of six donees).

Where gift-splitting is involved, both spouses must consent to it. Consent should be indicated on the
gift tax return (or returns) the spouses file. IRS prefers that both spouses indicate their consent on
each return filed. (Because more than $14,000 is being transferred by a spouse, a gift tax return (or
returns) will have to be filed, even if the $28,000 exclusion covers total gifts. Please contact me
regarding the preparation of a gift tax return (or returns), if more than $14,000 is being given to a
single donee in any year.)

The “present interest” requirement. For a gift to qualify for the annual exclusion, it must be a gift
of a “present interest.” That is, the donee’s enjoyment of the gift can’t be postponed into the future.
For example, if you put cash into a trust and provide that donee A is to receive the income from it
while he’s alive and donee B is to receive the principal at A’s death, B’s interest is a “future interest.”
Special valuation tables are consulted to determine the value of the separate interests you set up for

each donee. The gift of the income interest qualifies for the annual exclusion because enjoyment of
it is not deferred, so the first $14,000 of its total value will not be taxed. However, the gift of the other
interest (called a “remainder” interest) is a taxable gift in its entirety.

Exception to present interest rule. If the donee of a gift is a minor and the terms of the trust
provide that the income and property may be spent by or for the minor before he reaches age 21,
and that any amount left is to go to the minor at age 21, then the annual exclusion is available (that
is, the present interest rule will not apply). These arrangements (called Code Sec. 2503(c) trusts
because of the section in the Internal Revenue Code that permits them) allow parents to set assets
aside for future distribution to their children while taking advantage of the annual exclusion in the
year the trust is set up.

“Unified” credit for taxable gifts. Even gifts that are not covered by the exclusion, and that are
thus taxable, may not result in a tax liability. This is so because a tax credit wipes out the federal gift
tax liability on the first taxable gifts that you make in your lifetime, up to $5.49 million for 2017.
However, to the extent you use this credit against a gift tax liability, it reduces (or eliminates) the
credit available for use against the federal estate tax at your death.

Per the IRS : The basic exclusion amount (or applicable exclusion amount in years prior to 2011) is $1,500,000 (2004-2005), $2,000,000 (2006-2008), $3,500,000 (2009), $5,000,000 (2010-2011), $5,120,000 (2012), $5,250,000 (2013), $5,340,000 (2014), $5,430,000 (2015), $5,450,000 (2016), $5,490,000 (2017), and $11,180,000 (2018).

 

Please call if you wish to discuss this area further or have questions about related topics.