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My mom sold her house and gave each of her four children a gift requiring a 709 to be filed. Does a separate 709 have to be filed for each person or is once sufficient. I see it asks for name and address but does that require the full mailing address or just the city/state? Thanks.
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The 709 is filed so that the IRS can keep track of someone's total lifetime gifts, in case they become liable for Estate/ Gift Tax.
Your mom would file one of these to report individual gifts in excess of the exclusion amount, currently $14,000 per donor, per donee.
The 709 is filed so that the IRS can keep track of someone's total lifetime gifts, in case they become liable for Estate/ Gift Tax.
Your mom would file one of these to report individual gifts in excess of the exclusion amount, currently $14,000 per donor, per donee.
How do you expand section A with an addendum? (I have gifted 3 people). Thanks!
Why do you reference the exclusion amount as $14,000? I’m reading that it is $15,000 for 2019 and 2020? My thinking is that don’t have to file 709 if give no more than $15,000 to a child? Also, if both husband and wife each give the allowable exclusion amount to a child from joint checking account should separate checks be sent out to avoid having to do the 709 filing?
@ron6612 This thread is very old. When the user forum changed from Answer Exchange to Real Money Talk, a lot of threads migrated over with June 2019 dates but are really much older. That's why the gift tax amount you see here is out of date.
https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tips/estates/the-gift-tax-made-simple/L5tGWVC8N
I’m confused about the term split gift and need to file 709. If my wife and I each write separate checks from our joint account to one child for $15k each would we still need to file the 709 for a split gift?
@ron6612 wrote:
I’m confused about the term split gift and need to file 709. If my wife and I each write separate checks from our joint account to one child for $15k each would we still need to file the 709 for a split gift?
No. An individual is allowed to gift $15k to another individual without having to file a Form 709.
So if you gift 15K to the child and your spouse gifts $15K to the same child there is no requirement for either of you to report the gifts given.
Even if same joint checking account?
And that situation has nothing to do with split gift rule?
@ron6612 wrote:
And that situation has nothing to do with split gift rule?
No, this situation has nothing to do with gift splitting since each individual gift does not exceed the $15k exclusion.
IRS Form 709 instructions page 6 - https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i709.pdf#page=6
You noted in your post “since each individual gift does exceed the $15k exclusion.” Did you mean to say “does not exceed?”
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