Gift Tax

  • Creator
    Topic
  • #1496256
    AMERICANDREAM
    Participant

    From Wiley Testbank:
    Sheri received jewelry as a gift from her aunt, Amy. At the time of the gift, the jewelry had a fair market value of $54,000 and an adjusted basis of $19,000. This was the only gift that Sheri received from Amy during 2015. If Amy paid a gift tax of $8,000 on the transfer of the gift to Sheri, what tax basis will Sheri have for the jewelry?

    A) $19,000
    B) $25,000
    C) $26,000 –> Correct
    D) $27,000

    I thought the answer was A. I used Becker for lecture materials but nowhere in the textbook mentions that if the gift appreciates in value, we need to take that into account…

    The answer is: 8k*(35/40)

    Is this something I need to be worried about? If yes, I kind of blame becker…

    AUD - 92
    BEC - NINJA in Training
    FAR - 90
    REG - 88
    If you think you failed, you passed.
Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
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  • #1496436
    AMERICANDREAM
    Participant

    anyone?

    AUD - 92
    BEC - NINJA in Training
    FAR - 90
    REG - 88
    If you think you failed, you passed.
    #1496457
    RE2PECT
    Participant

    I always get tripped up on these questions, but it has to do with the gift tax being paid, which adds on to the donee's basis.

    gift tax paid*(increase in FMV of gift / FMV of the gift minus the gift tax exclusion)

    8000*[(54000-19000)/(54000-14000)]
    8000*(35000/40000) = 7000

    19000 + 7000= 26000

    "Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity."

    Roger & Ninja

    FAR: 75
    AUD: 73, 81
    BEC: 71, 73, 82
    REG: 68, 82

    FAR: 75 Roger & Ninja (notes/flashcards/audio/MCQ)
    AUD: 73, 81
    BEC: 71, retake 8/29
    REG:

    #1496476
    CageTheCPA
    Participant

    Their explanation is garbage.

    No, I don't recall seeing anything related to Gift Taxes on REG. But you never know… so, just don't let them (try to) trick you.

    Whenever a gift appreciates you have to take the carryover basis (the giver's basis) plus any gift tax attributable to the appreciation (the $7K in @Re2pect calculation above).

    Hope this helps!

    B - 81

    A - 80

    R - 75

    F - 83

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