I am working on the estate taxes for my mom’s estate. The only beneficiaries are myself and my sister. We sold her house and have a capital gain on the selling. Does the estate pay the tax on the capital gain or does this need to be passed to my sister and I through the K-1s? If the estate pays the capital gain tax and there is no other income from the estate do I need to create K-1s for myself and sister? If no K-1s need to be generated is it necessary to enter any beneficiary info in TT? -Thanks
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The estate can choose to pay the tax; however, if you want to distribute the proceeds then you will report the gains on the beneficiaries K-1s. If the estate pays the tax you should still enter beneficiary information and issue the K-1s, even though they will have all zeros.
If the title to the house was in your mom's name, then her estate acquired the house (for tax purposes) when she died. The sale should be reported on Form 1041 by the estate. There should not generally be a tax on the sale since the basis of the house is marked-to-market at death. That is, if the estate sells it before the house appreciates further there is no gain or loss.
DavidD66, thanks for the response! Some follow-up questions:
Just to clarify ...when you say "proceeds", do you mean the capital gain amount (i.e if the capital gains was $20,000 then the proceeds equal $20,000)?
If I understand your statement, when the proceeds are distributed to the beneficiaries, they pay capital gains tax on the $20,000 and not the estate?
If the proceeds are split equally between the two beneficiaries, $10,000 on their respective K-1, is the capital gain tax each beneficiary pays based on $10,000?
Thanks
Proceeds generally means the gross sales price - what the seller paid for the property less commissions and other selling expenses. When the estate makes a cash distribution to the beneficiaries, the total would be split according to their respective shares of the estate.
Capital gain would be the net taxable income from the sale (proceeds minus cost basis). As DavidD66 said, if the estate pays the tax on the gain, the K-1s would report no income. But if the tax isn't paid by the estate, the gain is reported on Schedule K-1 to the beneficiaries and would be taxable income on their personal returns.
Think of it this way: If the estate pays the tax out of the proceeds, the distribution to the beneficiaries would be proceeds less tax. If the income is reported to the beneficiaries, they would receive more of the proceeds but have to pay the tax out of the distribution.
This may not be relevant if, as zeelimit mentioned, there is no taxable gain from the sale - and therefore no tax to be paid.
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