Final regulations for Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 2801 may have important implications for U.S. persons receiving gifts or inheritances from individuals who have expatriated from the United States.
Understanding who qualifies as a covered expatriate, what gifts and inheritances are covered, and who is liable for the 40% tax is crucial for compliance starting in 2025.
The final regulations under Section 2801 create a new layer of tax responsibility for U.S. recipients of gifts and inheritances from certain expatriates.
What is IRC section 2801?
The final regulations under Section 2801 create a new layer of tax responsibility for U.S. recipients of gifts and inheritances from certain expatriates.
The United States generally does not tax its citizens or residents on the receipt of gifts or inheritances and instead these taxes are assessed on the individual making the gift or the estate distributing to a beneficiary. Historically, these rules have also applied to gifts and inheritances that U.S. persons receive from non-U.S. persons.
This changed when the Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2008 introduced Section 2801, under which the IRS recently published final regulations on Jan. 14, 2025. These final regulations apply to gifts or inheritances received on or after Jan. 1, 2025.
Section 2801 imposes a tax on U.S. citizens and residents who receive gifts or inheritances from covered expatriates.
The Section 2801 tax is separate from the exit tax that the expatriate may have paid upon leaving the country.
Related sections
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