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It depends on the circumstances.
The simple answer is that your basis is:
plus
plus
Now, if the gift was actually a life estate, your basis is the full fair market value on the date he died. A life estate means (roughly speaking) that part of the house is given to you, but your brother had the right to live in the house until he died, and you had no right to sell your half to someone else. (With a gift in fee simple, without a life estate, you would be free to sell your half to another investor, a property developer, or anyone else.). A life estate can be in writing in the deed, or it can be implied by the facts and circumstances.
If you claim on your taxes that there was an implied life estate, and you use the full FMV in 2021 as your basis, I would recommend that you take whatever steps you can to document that it was a life estate, in case of audit. You would want to show by facts and circumstances that your brother's intention was that he would live in the house and you couldn't sell or force a sale of your half. Maybe you have old letters, or maybe there are other family members who knew about it at the time who could write you a letter confirming the facts. I don't know how likely it is that you would be audited, but it might be a good idea to be prepared for the worst, just in case.
Thank you! That is incredibly helpful!
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