Current Situation in Early 2026
In early 2026, the federal estate tax exemption stands at $15 million per person, or $30 million for married couples. This permanent level, established by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025, offers broad protection against federal taxes for most estates.
However, state-level estate taxes operate independently. These are taxes imposed by states on the transfer of assets at death, often with much lower exemptions than the federal threshold. As of January 2026, 12 states and the District of Columbia levy estate taxes: Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington, plus D.C.
Exemptions vary widely. Connecticut aligns with the federal at $15 million (flat 12% rate). New York offers about $7.35 million. Massachusetts fixes at $2 million (not indexed). Others range from $3 million to $5.49 million, with rates up to 20% in Hawaii or higher in Washington.
Five states impose inheritance taxes—paid by beneficiaries: Kentucky, Maryland (both estate and inheritance), Nebraska, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Rates depend on relationship, often exempting spouses and children but hitting distant relatives harder.
Early 2026 surveys of high-net-worth families show growing attention to state taxes. With federal relief, advisors report more focus on state exposure, especially for estates between $2 million and $15 million. Relocation inquiries rise in high-tax states like New York and Massachusetts.
Predictions for 2026 State Tax Impacts
In 2026, state estate taxes affect more families than federal ones. Predictions indicate thousands of estates paying state taxes annually, versus fewer than 1,000 federally.
One trend: increased residency planning. High-net-worth individuals in high-tax states consider moving to no-tax states like Florida, Texas, Nevada, or Tennessee. Advisors forecast 10-20% uptick in domicile changes for estates over $5 million.
Popular moves include New York or Massachusetts to Florida. Savings could reach hundreds of thousands—for a $10 million estate in Massachusetts, state tax might exceed $800,000; zero in Florida.
Predictions include more incomplete domicile trusts or non-grantor trusts in low-tax states for income avoidance, indirectly aiding estate planning.
Snowbird strategies evolve: part-year residency with careful records to claim low-tax domicile.
Business owners predict gifting real estate or interests before relocation to avoid situs-based taxes.
Surveys suggest state taxes drive 30-40% of mid-large estate relocations in 2026.
Overall, variations push geographic diversification in 2026.
Challenges and Risks in State Tax Planning
State taxes present obstacles. Low exemptions catch rising asset values, especially homes.
Relocation risks scrutiny—states audit changes aggressively. Proving domicile requires ties like voting, driver’s license, time spent. Failed moves trigger back taxes, penalties.
Costs mount: moving expenses, dual homes, advisory fees $50,000+.
Family issues arise—leaving networks or schools.
Clawback rules in states like New York tax recent gifts.
Inheritance taxes surprise beneficiaries with unequal burdens.
Multi-state property complicates—taxes based on situs.
Policy shifts possible; some states may adjust rates.
Emotional ties hinder moves.
Opportunities from 2026 State Strategies
Variations create advantages. Relocating to no-tax states eliminates liability, saving substantially.
Florida or Texas attract with lifestyle plus savings.
Partial moves preserve property while minimizing exposure.
Early 2026 data shows successful changes yielding seven-figure savings.
Trust siting in Delaware or South Dakota adds protection.
Gifting uses federal exemption, reducing state taxable estates.
Philanthropy deducts, lowering bases.
Quality of life improves in desired locations.
Conclusion
In 2026 and beyond, state-level estate taxes vary widely amid federal $15 million exemption, driving residency planning for many families.
Risks like audits and costs demand caution. Opportunities for savings and protection benefit proactive planners.
Mid-to-high-net-worth in taxing states gain most. Reviewing residency and assets in 2026 optimizes outcomes.
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