Is money paid to my step children for their interest in my late husband's house considered a gift?

MarthaM2017
MarthaM2017 Member Posts: 3 Newcomer

Prior to my husband's passing, we set up a Transfer on Death instrument to pass his house to me. We made a verbal agreement that after his passing, I would pay out to his three children half the value of the house. Do the rules for me paying them their portions fall under the rule for Gifts? The amounts will be more than $19,000 per each of the adult children. My elderly father has done taxes for years and feels this is not a gift and I should be able to pay them the full amount this year, rather than splitting it over years. Thanks for your help!

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  • JanaA
    JanaA FreeTaxUSA Agent Posts: 145 image
    Answer ✓
    Hello MarthmaM2017! I'm sorry for the loss of your husband. This is a thoughtful question, and I want to make sure you have the right information.

    Whether these payments are considered "gifts" depends on how the arrangement is characterized. Generally, a gift is a transfer of money or property without receiving something of equal value in return. If the verbal agreement created a legal obligation, meaning the stepchildren had a legitimate claim to that money, the payments might be treated as fulfilling a debt rather than as gifts.

    If there is no written, legally enforceable agreement or obligation for you to pay his children, the IRS will generally view any payments you make as gifts.

    That distinction matters, and it's one that really depends on the specific facts of your situation, including the laws of your state. This is the kind of question where an estate attorney could give you a definitive answer.

    That said, if the payments are treated as gifts, your father's instinct about not needing to split them over years is generally correct from a tax standpoint. The 2026 annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient. Amounts above that require you to file IRS Form 709, but that doesn't mean you'd owe gift tax. In 2026, the lifetime gift and estate tax exemption is $15 million per person, so most people can give well above the annual exclusion without ever paying gift tax, they simply use a portion of their lifetime exemption.

    Because the correct treatment here depends on whether this is a gift or a payment of an obligation, we'd strongly recommend consulting an estate attorney. They can review the specifics of your agreement and help you determine the right approach.
  • Austyn
    Austyn FreeTaxUSA Agent Posts: 35 image
    Answer ✓
    Hi MarthmaM2017,

    That's a very practical approach! If the payments are treated as gifts and you split them across two calendar years, keeping each payment at or below $19,000 per recipient per year, you'd generally stay within the annual exclusion and wouldn't need to file Form 709. That would certainly simplify things.

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