Step-Up in Basis

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Tax rule that resets cost basis of inherited assets to fair market value at date of death, eliminating capital gains tax on appreciation during decedent's lifetime. Heirs only pay tax on appreciation after inheritance. Does NOT apply to retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s) which pass with ordinary income tax due. Major estate planning benefit for highly appreciated assets.

Example

A mother purchased stock in 1980 for $10,000 that is now worth $500,000 at her death. Her son inherits the stock with a stepped-up basis of $500,000 (FMV at death), not the original $10,000 cost. If he sells immediately for $500,000, he owes zero capital gains tax. The $490,000 lifetime appreciation escapes taxation entirely. However, if she leaves him her $500,000 IRA instead, he pays ordinary income tax on all distributions with no step-up benefit.

Common Confusion

Students often incorrectly believe step-up applies to retirement accounts (it does NOT). IRAs and 401(k)s are subject to ordinary income tax with no basis adjustment. Another confusion: gifted assets do NOT receive step-up (they retain donor's original basis), making inheritance more tax-advantageous than lifetime gifts for highly appreciated assets. Also commonly missed: both capital gains AND losses are eliminated at death (basis resets regardless of gain or loss).

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which assets receive step-up in basis at death (stocks, bonds, real estate) versus those that do not (IRAs, 401(k)s, annuities)
  • Calculating the tax benefit of step-up by comparing inherited basis (FMV at death) to original cost basis
  • Comparing tax consequences of gifting versus bequeathing highly appreciated assets (gift = carryover basis, bequest = step-up)
  • Understanding that inherited assets automatically receive long-term capital gains treatment regardless of actual holding period
  • Recognizing estate planning scenarios where step-up provides significant tax savings for heirs

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Step-up basis amount Fair market value on date of death Or alternate valuation date (6 months after death) if elected by executor
Assets eligible for step-up Capital assets (stocks, bonds, real estate, tangible property) Does NOT include IRAs, 401(k)s, 403(b)s, or other tax-deferred retirement accounts
Holding period for inherited assets Automatic long-term treatment Regardless of how long heir holds before selling; always long-term capital gains rate
Community property states Full step-up on both halves In community property states, both spouses' halves may receive step-up at first death

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Patricia, age 78, owns stock purchased 40 years ago for $25,000 that is now worth $800,000. She wants to help her daughter, Jennifer, who needs funds for a home down payment. Patricia is considering either gifting the stock now or bequeathing it at death. Patricia's investment adviser should explain that from a tax perspective:

Question 2

Which of the following assets will receive a step-up in basis when inherited at the owner's death?

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Question 3

David inherited 5,000 shares of XYZ Corporation stock from his father, who passed away on March 15, 2025. His father originally purchased the shares for $20/share in 1995. On March 15, 2025 (date of death), XYZ stock was trading at $180/share. David sells all inherited shares three months later for $185/share. What is David's taxable capital gain?

Question 4

All of the following statements about step-up in basis are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An elderly client is evaluating whether to gift appreciated assets to his children during his lifetime or bequeath them at death. His portfolio includes:
- $2 million in publicly traded stock (cost basis: $400,000)
- $1.5 million traditional IRA
- $500,000 in municipal bonds (cost basis: $450,000)

Which of the following statements accurately describe the tax consequences?

1. If the stock is gifted during life, the children receive the $400,000 carryover basis
2. If the stock is inherited at death, the children receive a stepped-up basis of $2 million
3. The traditional IRA receives step-up in basis at death, eliminating income tax on the appreciation
4. The municipal bonds would receive step-up in basis at death to $500,000

💡 Memory Aid

Think of step-up as "Death = Debt Forgiveness" for capital gains. The IRS forgives all unrealized gains and resets the basis to today's value. But remember: Retirement accounts are RETIRED from step-up (IRAs, 401(k)s get NO step-up). Gift = Keep the receipt, Inherit = New receipt (gifted assets keep old basis, inherited assets get new basis at FMV).

Related Concepts

This term is part of these clusters:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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