Florida Capital Gains Tax on Inherited Property: Step-Up in Basis Explained for Probate, Trusts, and Lady Bird Deeds
When someone inherits a home or other valuable property in Florida, one of the biggest financial concerns is often not probate itself, but taxes. Families in Escambia County cities such as Pensacola, Cantonment, Molino, and Perdido Key, as well as families in Marion County communities such as Ocala, The Villages, Belleview, and Dunnellon, frequently ask the same question after inheriting property: “Will I owe capital gains taxes if I sell the house?” The answer depends largely on one of the most important tax rules in estate planning and probate law: the step-up in basis rule. Fortunately, under current federal law, inherited property often receives extremely favorable tax treatment at death. Whether a home passes through probate, a revocable trust, or a Lady Bird deed, the federal tax code generally allows heirs to receive a new tax basis equal to the property’s fair market value at the date of death. Understanding how this works can save heirs tens of thousands—or sometimes hundreds of thousands—of dollars in taxes when inherited property is eventually sold.
Florida Does Not Have a State Capital Gains Tax
One of the first things Florida residents should understand is that Florida does not impose a state capital gains tax. Unlike some states that tax income or investment gains separately, Florida has no state income tax at all. However, federal capital gains tax still applies under the Internal Revenue Code. This means that when heirs sell inherited property in places like Pensacola or Ocala, they may still owe federal taxes depending on the amount of gain and how the property’s tax basis is calculated. The key issue is not whether taxes exist, but how much taxable gain remains after applying the step-up in basis rule.
What Is Capital Gains Tax
Capital gains tax is the tax imposed on the profit from the sale of an asset. In real estate, the calculation is generally straightforward. The taxable gain is determined by subtracting the property’s tax basis from the eventual sale price. The larger the difference between the sale price and the tax basis, the larger the taxable gain may be. This is why basis matters so much in inherited property cases.
What Is “Tax Basis” When It Comes to Homes?
What is Tax Basis
When people hear the phrase “tax basis,” it often sounds far more complicated than it really is. In simple terms, a home’s tax basis is the number the IRS uses to measure profit when the property is eventually sold. Think of tax basis as the property’s starting tax value for capital gains purposes. When a home is sold, the IRS generally does not tax the entire sales price. Instead, the IRS looks at the difference between the sale price and the home’s tax basis. That difference is called the capital gain.
The basic formula looks like this: Sale Price – Tax Basis = Capital Gain. The larger the gap between the sales price and the tax basis, the larger the taxable gain may be.
A Simple Example of Tax Basis:
Imagine someone buys a home in Pensacola for $100,000. At the time of purchase, the home’s tax basis is generally $100,000 because that is what was paid for the property. Years later, the owner sells the home for $400,000. The IRS does not view this as simply receiving $400,000. Instead, the IRS sees:
Tax basis Is not the same as property tax value. This is where many Florida homeowners get confused. Tax basis for federal capital gains purposes is completely different from the value used by the county property appraiser for annual property taxes.
For example, a home in Escambia County or Marion County may have:
A market value
An assessed value for property taxes
A taxable value after exemptions
A federal tax basis for capital gains purposes
These are all separate concepts. The county property appraiser determines property tax assessments under Florida law, while the IRS uses tax basis to determine capital gains when the home is sold.
What Is Step-Up in Basis?
The step-up in basis rule comes from Internal Revenue Code § 1014. Under this federal law, most inherited property receives a new tax basis equal to the fair market value of the property on the date of the owner’s death. This is one of the most significant tax benefits available in estate planning.
For example, imagine a couple purchased a home in Pensacola in the 1980s for $70,000. By the time the owner passes away, the property is worth $500,000. Under the step-up in basis rule, the heir’s basis is generally reset to $500,000 rather than remaining at the original $70,000 purchase price.
If the heir later sells the property for $510,000, the taxable gain is typically only $10,000 instead of $440,000.
This single rule can dramatically reduce federal capital gains taxes for families inheriting Florida real estate.
Probate Property in Escambia County and Marion County
When inherited property passes through probate administration in Florida, the step-up in basis generally applies automatically at death. This means that homes inherited through probate in cities like Pensacola, Ocala, Belleview, or Perdido Key usually receive a new basis equal to the property’s fair market value as of the date of death. The reason is that probate assets are generally included in the decedent’s taxable estate under federal law. As a result, the step-up in basis provisions under Internal Revenue Code § 1014 apply. This treatment commonly applies to inherited homes, investment accounts, brokerage accounts, business interests, and other appreciated assets included in the estate.
Revocable Living Trusts and Step-Up in Basis
One of the most common misconceptions in Florida estate planning is that property held in a trust does not receive a step-up in basis. In reality, most standard revocable living trusts still receive full step-up treatment at death. A revocable trust is typically treated as a grantor trust during the owner’s lifetime. This means the IRS still treats the assets as belonging to the original owner for income tax purposes. When the trust creator dies, the trust usually becomes irrevocable, but the assets included in the trust are still generally eligible for step-up in basis under Internal Revenue Code § 1014.
This means a home held in a revocable trust in Ocala or Pensacola often receives the exact same favorable tax treatment as property passing through probate. The trust primarily helps avoid probate administration. It does not eliminate capital gains taxes altogether, but it does preserve the same step-up in basis rules available through probate transfers.
Lady Bird Deeds and Capital Gains Tax
Florida is one of the few states where enhanced life estate deeds—commonly known as Lady Bird deeds—are widely used in estate planning.
A Lady Bird deed allows the owner to retain complete control over the property during life while automatically transferring ownership to designated beneficiaries at death without probate.
From a capital gains tax standpoint, the important issue is whether the beneficiary still receives a step-up in basis. In most situations, the answer is yes.
Because the transfer occurs automatically at death, the property is generally treated similarly to probate or trust property for purposes of Internal Revenue Code § 1014. As a result, heirs inheriting homes through Lady Bird deeds in Florida usually receive a stepped-up basis equal to fair market value at the owner’s death.
This means the tax outcome is often nearly identical whether the property passes through probate, a revocable trust, or a Lady Bird deed.
The real difference involves probate avoidance and transfer mechanics rather than capital gains treatment itself.
Why the Step-Up in Basis Rule Matters So Much
The practical impact of the step-up in basis rule can be enormous for Florida families. Many homes in Pensacola, Ocala, and surrounding communities were purchased decades ago when prices were dramatically lower than they are today. Over time, appreciation may create hundreds of thousands of dollars in unrealized gain. Without the step-up in basis rule, heirs could inherit not only the property, but also the built-in capital gains tax burden from decades of appreciation. Instead, federal law generally wipes away that historical appreciation at death by resetting the basis to current market value.
This is why inherited property is often one of the most tax-efficient transfers in the United States tax system.
Because the stepped-up basis is tied to fair market value at the date of death, obtaining a professional appraisal is often critically important. In areas such as Pensacola Beach, Perdido Key, Ocala, and The Villages, real estate values can fluctuate significantly. A proper appraisal helps establish documentation supporting the property’s value for IRS purposes. Without clear valuation evidence, heirs may later face difficulties proving basis if the property is sold years after inheritance. For that reason, probate attorneys and accountants frequently recommend obtaining a date-of-death appraisal even when one is not legally required by the probate court itself.
Situations Where Step-Up in Basis Can Become More Complicated
Although the general rule is favorable, there are situations where basis calculations become more complicated. For example, certain irrevocable trusts may not receive the same step-up treatment if the assets are not included in the taxable estate for federal purposes. Similarly, retirement accounts such as IRAs and 401(k)s do not receive a step-up in basis because they are governed by different income tax rules entirely. Joint ownership can also create partial step-up situations depending on ownership structure and contribution history. These issues become especially important in higher-net-worth estates or sophisticated estate planning arrangements.
Selling Inherited Property Shortly After Death
If heirs sell inherited property relatively soon after the owner’s death, there is often little or no taxable capital gain because the sales price is usually close to the stepped-up basis. For example, if a home in Ocala is worth $400,000 at death and sells shortly afterward for $405,000, the taxable gain may only be $5,000. This favorable tax treatment is one reason many beneficiaries decide to sell inherited property rather than hold it long term.
Why Florida Estate Planning Often Focuses on Basis Planning
Estate planning attorneys frequently emphasize that step-up in basis is one of the most valuable wealth preservation tools available under current federal law. This is why many individuals avoid gifting highly appreciated real estate during life. A lifetime gift typically transfers the original low basis to the recipient, potentially creating large future capital gains taxes. By contrast, holding appreciated property until death generally allows heirs to receive a fully adjusted basis under Internal Revenue Code § 1014. For many Florida families, especially those owning long-held homes in Escambia County or Marion County, this distinction can have enormous tax consequences.
Final Thoughts on Inherited Property and Capital Gains Taxes in Florida
Whether inherited property passes through probate administration, a revocable living trust, or a Lady Bird deed, Florida heirs generally benefit from the same powerful federal tax rule: the step-up in basis under Internal Revenue Code § 1014. For families in Pensacola, Perdido Key, Ocala, Belleview, and surrounding communities, this rule often dramatically reduces or even eliminates federal capital gains taxes when inherited property is sold.
The most important concept to understand is that inherited property is usually not taxed based on what the original owner paid decades earlier. Instead, the basis is generally reset to the property’s fair market value at the owner’s death. That single adjustment is often the difference between owing taxes on decades of appreciation and owing little to no capital gains tax at all.
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