SOI Tax Stats - Gift Tax Statistics
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What is the Federal Gift Tax?
The Federal gift tax is a tax on the right to transfer property from a living person to other persons or trusts. Reported on Form 709, United States Gift (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return, data are collected on the donor and recipient of gifts that exceed the annual exclusion. The name of the recipient, recipient's relationship to the donor, type of property, and value of gift are reported, as are the total value of a donor's lifetime gifts and tax computation items.
For information about selected terms and concepts and a description of the data sources and limitations, please visit Gift Tax Study Metadata.
Statistical TablesTotal Gifts of Donor, Total Gifts, Deductions, Credits, and Net Gift Tax |
SOI Bulletin Articles
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2009 Gifts 2008 Gifts 2007 Gifts |
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This article describes gifts made during calendar year 2005. A total of $38.5 billion in assets was transferred from donors to donees, or gift recipients. Only 2.9 percent of returns were taxable, with $1.7 billion in gift tax liability reported. |
Inter Vivos Wealth Transfers, 1997 Gifts | |
This article describes gifts made during calendar year 1997. Like transfers of wealth at death, wealth transfers during life—called inter vivos wealth transfers—are subject to Federal taxation. Only individual gifts in excess of $10,000 were potentially taxable for Gift Year 1997. |
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