Comment on Anon calls in for financial advice
echodot@feddit.uk 4 days agoIf you’re unmarried and have no descendants sure. Although you’re kind of screwing them over, these days, you dying is the only way your kids are ever going to be able to buy a house.
faintwhenfree@lemmus.org 4 days ago
With inheritance taxes in the west not even then.
GenXLiberal@lemmy.world 4 days ago
I would love to have inheritance tax as something to worry about.
It would mean I have millions to leave my family.
HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 4 days ago
Unless you are dying with millions, inheritance tax is nothing.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 4 days ago
Exactly. I forget the limit, but it’s something north of $10M before it gets taxed in the US. Not sure about other western countries.
arrow74@lemm.ee 4 days ago
At least in the US inheritance tax really isn’t a thing. It’s only a couple of states that do it, and for federal taxes the estate has to be very large. In 2025 the exemption is 13.99 million per individual from any estate taxes. I certainly have never had a family member with an estate anywhere near that size
Actual_Idiot@midwest.social 2 days ago
$13,990,000 in 2025, doubled if you have a spouse (or deceased spouse).
bitchkat@lemmy.world 3 days ago
You can inherit a fair amount without paying inheritance tax.
neshura@bookwormstory.social 4 days ago
at least not without preparation, it’s insane that you have to figure out inheritance in advance or your descendants get screwed. If you set things up properly then here you can inherit a primary residence tax free, but if you don’t set things up then you’re just shafted.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 4 days ago
You’re really not. You can do zero planning and as long as the total amount is <$14M, there are no taxes due.
One big difference, however, is pretax investments (IRA and 401K in the US). Sell or convert to Roth before you die and it won’t be an issue at all. If everything is in regular taxable accounts, the beneficiaries even get a step up in basis, so they will only owe cap gains on growth after your death.
Any third rate tax person could figure that out.