Calculate 2026 gift tax using the $19,000 annual exclusion ($38,000 with gift splitting for married couples) and $13.99M lifetime exemption. See how divorce changes your gifting strategy.
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Gift Tax Analysis — This Year
Fully Excluded — No Gift Tax
Annual Exclusion Per Recipient$38,000 (with splitting)
Total Exclusion (3 recipients)$114,000
Amount Tax-Free$50,000
Taxable Gift (uses lifetime)$0
With gift splitting, you and your spouse can each give $19,000/year per recipient — doubling the annual exclusion to $38,000/recipient.
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Gift Tax Rules for Married Couples in 2026
The federal gift tax allows individuals to give up to $19,000 per recipient per year in 2026 without any gift tax consequences. Married couples can double this to $38,000 per recipient through gift splitting — even if only one spouse actually provides the funds. Over time, strategic annual gifting can transfer substantial wealth without estate or gift tax.
Gifts above the annual exclusion are not necessarily taxed immediately. Instead, they reduce your $13.99 million lifetime exemption. Gift tax (40%) only applies once you've exhausted your entire lifetime exemption. The exemption is shared with the estate tax — using it on gifts reduces what's available to shelter your estate.
Gift Tax Formula for Couples
2026 Annual Exclusion: $19,000 per recipient per donor
With Gift Splitting: $38,000 per recipient (married couples)
Annual Taxable Gift = Max(0, Gift − Annual Exclusion × Recipients)
Lifetime Exemption: $13,990,000 per person ($27,980,000 per couple)
Taxable Gifts reduce Lifetime Exemption dollar-for-dollar
Gift Tax Rate: 40% (only on gifts exceeding lifetime exemption)
Annual Gifting Potential (married, 3 children):
$38,000 × 3 recipients = $114,000/year tax-free
Over 10 years: $1,140,000 transferred estate-tax-free
Gift Splitting Requirements:
- Must be legally married at time of gift
- Both spouses must consent (Form 709)
- Both must file Form 709 even if no tax owed
Example Calculation
Example: Married Couple Gifting to 3 Adult Children
Annual exclusion per spouse$19,000
Annual exclusion with splitting (per child)$38,000
3 children × $38,000$114,000/yr tax-free
Over 10 years$1,140,000
vs single filer over 10 years$570,000
Marriage advantage over 10 years$570,000 more gifted
A married couple with three adult children can transfer $1.14 million over 10 years using only the annual exclusion — no gift tax, no Form 709 required (below reporting threshold), and no reduction of lifetime exemption.
Frequently Asked Questions
In 2026, each person can give up to $19,000 per recipient per year without any gift tax consequences. Married couples who elect gift splitting can give up to $38,000 per recipient. The annual exclusion is per recipient — meaning you can give $19,000 each to your three children, your two grandchildren, your sibling, and anyone else, all in the same year, with no gift tax or reporting required.
Gift splitting is only available to legally married couples. If you divorce during the tax year, you cannot gift-split for any gifts made after the divorce date, and you cannot split gifts made before the divorce if you remarry before year end (complex rules apply). After divorce, each person is limited to the $19,000 individual annual exclusion. This can be a significant disadvantage for high-net-worth individuals using gifting as an estate planning strategy.
No. If all your gifts to any single recipient are within the annual exclusion ($19,000 per person in 2026), you do not need to file Form 709 (Gift Tax Return). You must file Form 709 if you make any gift to a single recipient exceeding the annual exclusion, if you gift-split with your spouse (both spouses must file), or if you make a gift of a future interest. Even when you file, you typically owe no gift tax until you exhaust your lifetime exemption.
Yes. Gifts between US citizen spouses are unlimited under the marital deduction — there is no gift tax on transfers between spouses, regardless of amount. Non-citizen spouses have a higher annual exclusion ($185,000 in 2026) but not the unlimited marital deduction. After divorce, this unlimited exclusion disappears, and all gifts between ex-spouses count against the normal annual exclusion.
Yes. Payments made directly to educational institutions for tuition or directly to medical providers for healthcare are completely excluded from gift tax — with no dollar limit. These are called "qualified transfers" and do not count against your annual exclusion or lifetime exemption. The payment must be made directly to the institution, not to the student or patient. This is one of the most powerful and overlooked gifting strategies available.
Annual exclusion utilization chart by recipient, multi-year gift splitting capacity calculator, and within-limit vs. taxable gift visualization.
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Open Advanced Calculator — Exclusion Chart & Gift Splitting Visualization
Annual Exclusion Amount
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Gift Recipients & Amounts
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Annual Exclusion Utilization by Recipient
Green = within annual exclusion. Red = taxable gift (requires Form 709).
Annual Exclusion Summary
$4,000 taxable
Total Gifts$45,000
Total Excluded (no gift tax)$41,000
Total Taxable (reduces lifetime exemption)$4,000
Form 709 RequiredYes — 1 gift(s) exceed limit
Professional
Form 709 cumulative gift analysis, Crummey trust projection, GRAT analysis with §7520 hurdle rate, and lifetime exemption sunset risk planning.
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Open Professional Calculator — Form 709, GRAT & Lifetime Exemption Planning
Form 709 Gift Tax Return Analysis
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Form 709 Summary
No tax owed — exemption covers all
Annual Exclusion Used$108,000
Current Year Taxable Gifts$0
Total Cumulative Taxable$250,000
Lifetime Exemption Used$250,000
Lifetime Exemption Remaining$13,740,000
Form 709 RequiredNo (all gifts within exclusion)
Note: Gift tax is not actually owed until the lifetime exemption is fully used. Taxable gifts reduce the estate tax exemption dollar-for-dollar at death. Form 709 is still required to report taxable gifts even if no tax is owed.