Never thought I would ever hear of anything as inane as this. Executrix of her father's estate is considering selling business property currently in the estate. She has considered "owner financing" in order to bring a better price and a quicker sale. Collateral is firm. Of course, the installment sale doesn't avoid sudden capital gains as it normally does, since the property is already at FMV.
Question: If the installment sale is made while the property is owned by the state, does this mean for tax purposes that the estate must be kept open until the proceeds are fully collected?
Probably not, but until estate is settled, the interest will be ordinary income at estate income tax rates, even if capital gains are non-existent. There are two heirs, so if divided equally, I suppose they could own a joint receivable and report interest every year. If it stays in the estate, there will be no personal deduction or standard deduction, just the paltry estate deduction unless they withdraw the interest.
Taxpayers are young, and little other income -- whereas the property will approach seven digits in value. That's why this question is important.
Question: If the installment sale is made while the property is owned by the state, does this mean for tax purposes that the estate must be kept open until the proceeds are fully collected?
Probably not, but until estate is settled, the interest will be ordinary income at estate income tax rates, even if capital gains are non-existent. There are two heirs, so if divided equally, I suppose they could own a joint receivable and report interest every year. If it stays in the estate, there will be no personal deduction or standard deduction, just the paltry estate deduction unless they withdraw the interest.
Taxpayers are young, and little other income -- whereas the property will approach seven digits in value. That's why this question is important.
Comment