Daughter's name added to title
November 27th, 2009
November 20th, 2009
November 13th, 2009
November 6th, 2009
October 30th, 2009
Dear Len & Rosie, My father died and left some cash and the house to my mother. She is 82 years old. She has put the house in my name and hers. Her doctor has informed her she needs a pacemaker and now she wants to put the house solely in my name.
I have several concerns. The first is tax purposes for me. How will this affect my and my husband’s taxes for the next year? I also have other sisters and a brother who will eventually inherit part of the home. Mom’s lawyer says that she is safe with just my name on the deed, but I am not sure. - Linda
Dear Linda, We normally do not recommend to my clients that they add their children’s names to the title of their homes. One reason why is that if you get sued if you declare bankruptcy, your mother could lose her home. Also, she would not be able to sell her home without your permission.
There will not be any particular tax consequences to you this year if your mother signs her home over to you. Gifts are not subject to income tax. Your mother will have to file a gift tax return with the IRS, but she won’t have to send a check to the IRS unless she has given away more than $1 million of gifts in excess of the annual gift tax exclusion (currently $13,000).
The property tax of the home will remain the same. Thanks to Propositions 13 and 58 there will be no reassessment. You will lose the $7,000 homeowner’s property tax exclusion unless you live in the home, but that will increase the property tax by less than $100. It’s no big deal.
The big deal comes in when you sell the home after your mother’s death. If she gives you the home to you, it will not get a new cost basis when she dies. If you ever sell the home, you will have to pay capital gains tax on the increase in value since either your father’s death.
You will have tax problems even if you don’t sell the home. There is no property tax transfer exclusion for transfers among siblings. If you add your brother and sisters on title the way your mother wants you to, either before or after her death, the home will get reassessed and the property taxes will increase dramatically.
Your mother would be better off if she keeps the entire home in her name, and creates a revocable trust to both avoid probate and take advantage of the basis adjustment that will happen upon her death. As an added benefit, if the children get their shares directly from their mother instead of from you, there will be no property tax reassessment.
Your mother should seriously consider a transfer of the home only if she is in a nursing home or is likely to need nursing home care and Medi-Cal benefits during her lifetime. And in that event, it’s still not best to simply give her home to her children. An irrevocable trust designed to shelter her home from Medi-Cal estate recovery claims is a better bet.
Len Tillem and Rosie McNichol are elder law attorneys. Contact them at 846 Broadway, Sonoma, CA 95476, by phone at 996-4505, or www.lentillem.com. Len also answers legal questions weekdays, noon to 1 p.m., and Sundays, 4-7 p.m., on KGO Radio 810 AM.
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