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TaxGuy,
Thanks for the quick answer. I noticed that you put astericks around the "*not*" in your response does that mean there are some exceptions to that answer?
The recipient of the gift is not liable for any tax. It is the "giver" who files a return, if the gift is over 10,000 in any given year, and pays any tax due.
(I'm not a lawyer, but, read a lot)
Wanda
Was that a "considerate, respectful and polite" response to my reply? I think not.
I WAS talking about income tax. There is no income tax due from the recipient of a gift. I was only explaining further, that there is a gift tax due on the excess over $10,000 (in most cases), but, it's owed by the giver of the gift.
I live in MD and have a similar gift question concerning my mortgage.
My elderly mother 'gifted' me the remainder of the money to pay our mortgage off. I understand that she has to use the unified exemption to make it tax free to her, since it is over $10,000 - but I am getting conflicting info on my status.
A local tax CPA tells me that I have no tax obligation. I asked the IRS about it, and they tell me that it is additional reportable income. If I do have reportable income on that 'cash' gift, I will have to take a mortgage out to pay off the tax...
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