Current Situation in Early 2026
As of January 2026, the federal estate tax exemption stands at $15 million per individual. This means a person can transfer up to $15 million in assets during life or at death without owing federal estate tax—a tax on large amounts of money or property passed at death. For married couples, this effectively doubles to $30 million through proper planning.
This level comes from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed in 2025. It removed the sunset provision from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which would have cut the exemption to around $7 million per person starting in 2026. Instead, the new law sets a permanent baseline of $15 million, with future inflation adjustments beginning in 2027.
In 2025, the exemption was $13.99 million per person. The increase to $15 million provides an extra $1.01 million of tax-free transfer room for individuals, or about $2 million more for couples. The annual gift exclusion— the amount one can give per recipient each year without using lifetime exemption or paying gift tax—stays at $19,000 per person ($38,000 for couples splitting gifts).
The federal estate tax rate above the exemption remains 40%. Generation-skipping transfer tax exemption, which applies to gifts or bequests skipping a generation like to grandchildren, aligns at $15 million per person.
High-net-worth individuals and families enter 2026 with more certainty than expected just a year ago. Surveys from late 2025 show many advisors shifted from urgent “use it or lose it” gifting to longer-term strategies.
Predictions for 2026 Threshold Impacts
In 2026, the higher exemption reduces the number of estates subject to federal tax. Historically, only about 0.2% of estates paid federal estate tax even under lower exemptions. With $15 million per person, even fewer—perhaps under 0.1%—will face it.
This affects mainly ultra-high-net-worth families with assets over $30 million for couples. For them, the permanent higher threshold means less pressure to make large lifetime gifts solely to avoid a drop.
Planning shifts toward optimizing transfers rather than rushing them. Advisors predict increased use of lifetime gifting to remove future asset growth from estates. For example, gifting appreciating stocks or real estate now freezes the value at today’s levels, with post-gift growth escaping estate tax.
One trend: more focus on basis step-up. Assets held until death get a step-up in cost basis to fair market value, erasing capital gains tax for heirs. With less fear of estate tax hitting mid-sized estates, some families may hold assets longer for this benefit, especially low-basis holdings.
Portability—allowing a surviving spouse to use the deceased spouse’s unused exemption—remains key. Couples can reach $30 million tax-free, but it requires filing an estate tax return even if no tax is due.
For estates near or above $15 million, predictions include greater interest in advanced tools like grantor trusts or family limited partnerships to apply valuation discounts. These reduce taxable gift values by 20-40% for lack of control or marketability.
Data from early 2026 planning surveys suggest high-net-worth individuals (over $10 million net worth) plan to increase annual exclusion gifts to family members. This builds generational wealth without dipping into lifetime exemption.
Policymakers face less immediate pressure for reform, as the higher exemption lowers revenue projections. Some experts predict stability through the decade, barring major political shifts.
Overall, 2026 brings calmer planning. Families with $5-15 million estates, once worried about the sunset, now often fall safely below the threshold.
Challenges and Risks in Exemption Planning
The higher exemption offers relief, but risks remain. First, policy uncertainty—Congress can change laws anytime. A future administration might lower the exemption or raise rates to fund programs. This keeps advisors recommending flexible plans.
Costs of planning pose another challenge. Setting up trusts or gifting strategies involves legal and advisory fees, often tens of thousands for complex cases. Valuation appraisals for non-cash gifts add expense and IRS scrutiny risk.
Family dynamics complicate matters. Large gifts can spark disputes if not all heirs benefit equally. Communication helps avoid resentment.
For ultra-wealthy families, the 40% rate on excess amounts creates big liabilities. A $40 million estate for a couple faces about $4 million tax ($40 million minus $30 million, times 40%). Poor planning, like forgetting portability, wastes exemption.
State estate taxes vary independently. States like New York or Massachusetts tax estates far below federal levels, so residency planning matters.
Illiquidity risks arise if estates hold non-liquid assets like family businesses or real estate. Tax due within nine months of death may force sales without liquidity planning, such as life insurance.
Inflation adjustments start in 2027, but if low, real exemption value erodes slowly.
Opportunities from the 2026 Threshold
The $15 million exemption opens strong opportunities for legacy building. Families transfer more wealth tax-free, preserving assets for heirs or charity.
Lifetime gifting removes future appreciation from estates. Gifting $5 million in stock today means growth outside the taxable estate. Over 20 years at 7% annual return, that could save millions in tax.
Married couples maximize portability for $30 million protection. This suits many high-net-worth pairs.
Higher thresholds encourage multi-generational planning. Families fund education or home purchases for grandchildren without tax hits.
Philanthropy benefits too. Larger exemptions pair with charitable deductions for tax-efficient giving.
For business owners, gifting interests now locks in lower values, with growth escaping tax. This aids succession.
Asset protection grows. Trusts shield from creditors or divorce while using exemption.
Early 2026 data shows rising trust formations for control over distributions, like staggered payouts to heirs.
The permanent nature allows unhurried decisions, reducing errors.
Conclusion
In 2026 and beyond, the federal estate tax exemption at $15 million per person ($30 million for couples) provides stability and opportunity after avoiding the sunset drop. Families and advisors shift from defensive rushes to thoughtful strategies focused on growth removal, basis management, and protection.
Risks like policy changes, costs, and disputes persist, requiring professional guidance. Yet opportunities for efficient transfers, family security, and legacy protection outweigh them for many.
High-net-worth individuals benefit most, but even moderate estates gain peace of mind. Reviewing plans in 2026 ensures alignment with this landscape, balancing tax savings with goals.
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