1.1015-5—Increased basis for gift tax paid.
(a) General rule in the case of gifts made on or before December 31, 1976.
(1)
Subject to the conditions and limitations provided in section 1015(d), as added by the Technical Amendments Act of 1958, the basis (as determined under section 1015(a) and paragraph (a) of § 1.1015-1) of property acquired by gift is increased by the amount of gift tax paid with respect to the gift of such property. Under section 1015(d)(1)(A), such increase in basis applies to property acquired by gift on or after September 2, 1958 (the date of enactment of the Technical Amendments Act of 1958). Under section 1015(d)(1)(B), such increase in basis applies to property acquired by gift before September 2, 1958, and not sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of before such date. If section 1015(d)(1)(A) applies, the basis of the property is increased as of the date of the gift regardless of the date of payment of the gift tax. For example, if the property was acquired by gift on September 8, 1958, and sold by the donee on October 15, 1958, the basis of the property would be increased (subject to the limitation of section 1015(d)) as of September 8, 1958 (the date of the gift), by the amount of gift tax applicable to such gift even though such tax was not paid until March 1, 1959. If section 1015(d)(1)(B) applies, any increase in the basis of the property due to gift tax paid (regardless of date of payment) with respect to the gift is made as of September 2, 1958. Any increase in basis under section 1015(d) can be no greater than the amount by which the fair market value of the property at the time of the gift exceeds the basis of such property in the hands of the donor at the time of the gift. See paragraph (b) of this section for rules for determining the amount of gift tax paid in respect of property transferred by gift.
(ii)
With respect to property acquired by gift before September 2, 1958, the provisions of section 1015(d) and this section do not apply if, before such date, the donee has sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of such property. The phrase sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of includes the surrender of a stock certificate for corporate assets in complete or partial liquidation of a corporation pursuant to section 331. It also includes the exchange of property for property of a like kind such as the exchange of one apartment house for another. The phrase does not, however, extend to transactions which are mere changes in form. Thus, it does not include a transfer of assets to a corporation in exchange for its stock in a transaction with respect to which no gain or loss would be recognizable for income tax purposes under section 351. Nor does it include an exchange of stock or securities in a corporation for stock or securities in the same corporation or another corporation in a transaction such as a merger, recapitalization, reorganization, or other transaction described in section 368(a) or 355, with respect to which no gain or loss is recognizable for income tax purposes under section 354 or 355. If a binding contract for the sale, exchange, or other disposition of property is entered into, the property is considered as sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of on the effective date of the contract, unless the contract is not subsequently carried out substantially in accordance with its terms. The effective date of a contract is normally the date it is entered into (and not the date it is consummated, or the date legal title to the property passes) unless the contract specifies a different effective date. For purposes of this subdivision, in determining whether a transaction comes within the phrase sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of, if a transaction would be treated as a mere change in the form of the property if it occurred in a taxable year subject to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, it will be so treated if the transaction occurred in a taxable year subject to the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 or prior revenue law.
(2)
Application of the provisions of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph may be illustrated by the following examples:
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(b) Amount of gift tax paid with respect to gifts made on or before December 31, 1976.
(1)
If only one gift was made during a certain calendar period (as defined in § 25.2502-1(c)(1) ), the entire amount of the gift tax paid under chapter 12 or the corresponding provisions of prior revenue laws for that calendar period is the amount of the gift tax paid with respect to the gift.
(ii)
If more than one gift was made during a certain calendar period, the amount of the gift tax paid under chapter 12 or the corresponding provisions of prior revenue laws with respect to any specified gift made during that calendar period is an amount, A, which bears the same ratio to B (the total gift tax paid for that calendar period) as C (the amount of the gift, computed as described in this paragraph (b)(1)(ii)) bears to D (the total taxable gifts for the calendar period computed without deduction for the gift tax specific exemption under section 2521 (as in effect prior to its repeal by the Tax Reform Act of 1976) or the corresponding provisions of prior revenue laws). Stated algebraically, the amount of the gift tax paid with respect to a gift equals:
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(iii)
If a gift consists of more than one item of property, the gift tax paid with respect to each item shall be computed by allocating to each item a proportionate part of the gift tax paid with respect to the gift, computed in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph.
(2)
For purposes of this paragraph, it is immaterial whether the gift tax is paid by the donor or the donee. Where more than one gift of a present interest in property is made to the same donee during a calendar period (as defined in § 25.2502-1(c)(1) ), the annual exclusion shall apply to the earliest of such gifts in point of time.
(3)
Where the donor and his spouse elect under section 2513 or the corresponding provisions of prior law to have any gifts made by either of them considered as made one-half by each, the amount of gift tax paid with respect to such a gift is the sum of the amounts of tax (computed separately) paid with respect to each half of the gift by the donor and his spouse.
(4)
The method described in section 1015(d)(2) and this paragraph for computing the amount of gift tax paid in respect of a gift may be illustrated by the following examples:
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Value of land given to W | $60,000 | ||
Less: Annual exclusion | $3,000 | ||
Marital deduction | 30,000 | 33,000 | |
Included amount of gift | $27,000 | ||
Value of securities given to S | 60,000 | ||
Less: Annual exclusion | 3,000 | ||
Included amount of gift | 57,000 | ||
Gift to charitable organization | 5,000 | ||
Less: Annual exclusion | 3,000 | ||
Charitable deduction | 2,000 | 5,000 | |
Included amount of gift | 0 | ||
Total included gifts | 84,000 | ||
Less: Specific exemption allowed | 30,000 | ||
Taxable gifts for 1959 | 54,000 | ||
Gift tax on $54,000 | 6,000 |
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A | B | |
---|---|---|
Value of land given to N | $43,000 | $43,000 |
Less: exclusion | 3,000 | 3,000 |
Included amount of gift | 40,000 | 40,000 |
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Value of securities given to N | 20,000 | 20,000 |
Less: exclusion | None | None |
Included amount of gift | 20,000 | 20,000 |
Cash gift to S | 23,000 | 23,000 |
Less: exclusion | 3,000 | 3,000 |
Included amount of gift | 20,000 | 20,000 |
Total included gifts | 80,000 | 80,000 |
Less: specific exemption | None | 30,000 |
Taxable gifts for 1956 | 80,000 | 50,000 |
Gift tax for 1956 | 11,325 | 5,250 |
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(c) Special rule for increased basis for gift tax paid in the case of gifts made after December 31, 1976—
(1) In general.
With respect to gifts made after December 31, 1976 (other than gifts between spouses described in section 1015(e) ), the increase in basis for gift tax paid is determined under section 1015(d)(6). Under section 1015(d)(6)(A), the increase in basis with respect to gift tax paid is limited to the amount (not in excess of the amount of gift tax paid) that bears the same ratio to the amount of gift tax paid as the net appreciation in value of the gift bears to the amount of the gift.
(2) Amount of gift.
In general, for purposes of section 1015(d)(6)(A)(ii), the amount of the gift is determined in conformance with the provisions of paragraph (b) of this section. Thus, the amount of the gift is the amount included with respect to the gift in determining (for purposes of section 2503(a)) the total amount of gifts made during the calendar year (or calendar quarter in the case of a gift made on or before December 31, 1981), reduced by the amount of any annual exclusion allowable with respect to the gift under section 2503(b), and any deductions allowed with respect to the gift under section 2522 (relating to the charitable deduction) and section 2523 (relating to the marital deduction). Where more than one gift of a present interest in property is made to the same donee during a calendar year, the annual exclusion shall apply to the earliest of such gifts in point of time.
(3) Amount of gift tax paid with respect to the gift.
In general, for purposes of section 1015(d)(6), the amount of gift tax paid with respect to the gift is determined in conformance with the provisions of paragraph (b) of this section. Where more than one gift is made by the donor in a calendar year (or quarter in the case of gifts made on or before December 31, 1981), the amount of gift tax paid with respect to any specific gift made during that period is the amount which bears the same ratio to the total gift tax paid for that period (determined after reduction for any gift tax unified credit available under section 2505) as the amount of the gift (computed as described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section) bears to the total taxable gifts for the period.
(4) Qualified domestic trusts.
For purposes of section 1015(d)(6), in the case of a qualified domestic trust (QDOT) described in section 2056A(a), any distribution during the noncitizen surviving spouse's lifetime with respect to which a tax is imposed under section 2056A(b)(1)(A) is treated as a transfer by gift, and any estate tax paid on the distribution under section 2056A(b)(1)(A) is treated as a gift tax. The rules under this paragraph apply in determining the extent to which the basis in the assets distributed is increased by the tax imposed under section 2056A(b)(1)(A).
(5) Examples.
Application of the provisions of this paragraph (c) may be illustrated by the following examples:
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Value of real estate transferred to Y | $100,000 | |
Less: Annual exclusion | 10,000 | |
Included amount of gift (C) | $90,000 | |
Value of painting transferred to Z | $70,000 | |
Less: annual exclusion | 10,000 | |
Included amount of gift | 60,000 | |
Total included gifts (D) | $150,000 | |
Total gift tax liability for 1995 gifts (B) | $55,500 |
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(6) Effective date.
The provisions of this paragraph (c) are effective for gifts made after August 22, 1995.
(d) Treatment as adjustment to basis.
Any increase in basis under section 1015(d) and this section shall, for purposes of section 1016(b) (relating to adjustments to a substituted basis), be treated as an adjustment under section 1016(a) to the basis of the donee's property to which such increase applies. See paragraph (p) of § 1.1016-5.