Over a decade ago, Granny established a life estate (probably to "get rid of assets" ?) transferring her home and several acres of surrounding farm land to her three children.
Granny died in 2013 or 2014, and the three heirs sold the property in 2015. The house was unused, except for perhaps some family personal use, after Granny's death.
The three heirs (one is my client) recently had the property appraised, and they feel that is a "fair value" to use for the cost basis for the 2015 sale.
It is reasonably clear that for estate/gift tax purposes, the value of the property at the date of Granny's death is relevant.
Does the same hold true for the cost basis for income tax considerations? Or, stated differently, do the children get to show "inherited" ( = LTCG ) and the (perhaps unknown??) value of the property on the day Granny died on their respective 2015 tax returns?
I've advised client to run all by the attorney who prepared the original property transfer some time ago, and perhaps even rattle a tax attorney's cage for a ruling. It should be noted I'm getting all of this "information" second-hand. (Oh yes - the three children are also having some problems agreeing on the "correct" answer to the situation.)
Anyone care to toss in a comment or two? Thanks!
FE
Granny died in 2013 or 2014, and the three heirs sold the property in 2015. The house was unused, except for perhaps some family personal use, after Granny's death.
The three heirs (one is my client) recently had the property appraised, and they feel that is a "fair value" to use for the cost basis for the 2015 sale.
It is reasonably clear that for estate/gift tax purposes, the value of the property at the date of Granny's death is relevant.
Does the same hold true for the cost basis for income tax considerations? Or, stated differently, do the children get to show "inherited" ( = LTCG ) and the (perhaps unknown??) value of the property on the day Granny died on their respective 2015 tax returns?
I've advised client to run all by the attorney who prepared the original property transfer some time ago, and perhaps even rattle a tax attorney's cage for a ruling. It should be noted I'm getting all of this "information" second-hand. (Oh yes - the three children are also having some problems agreeing on the "correct" answer to the situation.)
Anyone care to toss in a comment or two? Thanks!
FE
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