Re: A couple of inheritance tax questions
Posted: Sun Sep 18, 2022 7:09 am
I’ve got another somewhat implausible scenario, but thought it interesting as a thought experiment…
Let’s say the decedent had invested in some volatile stock, but coincidently then immediately after dropped dead.
The heir(s) learns of the death and inheritance things kick into gear. The heir has 10 months to report any inheritance tax.
In the next months, the executor of the decedent’s estate is following the procedures, but before the heir can get the inheritance, in the mean time, the stock that had been invested in crashes, let’s say it goes to zero.
As per my understanding, the inheritance tax rules would have the heir on the hook for inheritance tax on the taxable amount of the stock at the time of the decedents death - not the market value when the heir could actually sell it. If the inheritance tax would demand calculation at the time of death, the heir could be ruined…
On the flip side, if market movements were favourable (for the taxpayer), the assets may go up in value in the meantime and save the heir a large tax bill…
(a hefty increase in the value of the yen alone could have such a nice effect, and vice versa for the prior case)
———
Never mind… a book I am reading now had examples with market rates at the time of death applied, but in another section it suggests that market rates closer to the time of tax payment can be used.
Let’s say the decedent had invested in some volatile stock, but coincidently then immediately after dropped dead.
The heir(s) learns of the death and inheritance things kick into gear. The heir has 10 months to report any inheritance tax.
In the next months, the executor of the decedent’s estate is following the procedures, but before the heir can get the inheritance, in the mean time, the stock that had been invested in crashes, let’s say it goes to zero.
As per my understanding, the inheritance tax rules would have the heir on the hook for inheritance tax on the taxable amount of the stock at the time of the decedents death - not the market value when the heir could actually sell it. If the inheritance tax would demand calculation at the time of death, the heir could be ruined…
On the flip side, if market movements were favourable (for the taxpayer), the assets may go up in value in the meantime and save the heir a large tax bill…
(a hefty increase in the value of the yen alone could have such a nice effect, and vice versa for the prior case)
———
Never mind… a book I am reading now had examples with market rates at the time of death applied, but in another section it suggests that market rates closer to the time of tax payment can be used.