Educational information, not individual financial advice.
Key Takeaways
The annual gift tax exclusion lets you give a set amount to each recipient every year, tax-free, without reducing your lifetime exemption. It's the workhorse of multigenerational wealth transfer for families.
$19,000 per recipient per year. The amount doesn't increase every year — it's indexed in $1,000 increments, so it held at $17,000 for 2023 and 2024, moved to $18,000 for 2024, then to $19,000 for 2025 and 2026.
The exclusion is per pair (donor, recipient), per year:
Married couples can "gift-split," where any gift from either spouse is treated as half from each. This doubles the effective annual exclusion per recipient.
A couple with 3 children, 3 children-in-law, and 6 grandchildren can transfer 12 × $38,000 = $456,000/year tax-free. Over 20 years that's $9.1 million, plus all the appreciation that would have accrued on that money in their estate.
The annual exclusion applies only to gifts of a "present interest" — the recipient must have immediate, unrestricted access to the gift. A gift into a trust where the beneficiary can't access the money for years doesn't qualify by default.
Crummey powers solve this for trusts. The trust gives the beneficiary a 30-day (or 60-day) right to withdraw their annual exclusion amount. Most beneficiaries don't exercise the right, but the right itself creates the present interest and qualifies the gift. This is standard machinery in Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs).
Transfers between spouses are unlimited (no gift tax) if the recipient is a U.S. citizen. Non-citizen spouses have an annual limit of $194,000 in 2026 — much higher than the standard $19k but still limited.
A separate, unlimited exclusion exists for:
Tuition covers any level — K–12 through graduate school — but only the tuition itself, not room and board, books, or supplies. Those can be covered through regular annual exclusion gifts.
Grandparents who pay tuition directly to the college can move $80,000–$100,000/year per grandchild out of their estate, while still making full annual exclusion gifts to the same grandchild for other purposes.
The annual exclusion resets January 1. Unused portions don't carry over. If you intended to give $19,000 to a grandchild in 2025 but didn't, you can still give $19,000 in 2026 (the fresh year's exclusion), but you've lost the 2025 exclusion.
This creates the discipline to gift annually. Families with long-term wealth transfer plans often establish fixed-date annual gifts (e.g., first week of January each year) to ensure full utilization.
Gifts within the annual exclusion don't require a gift tax return (Form 709). Gifts above require Form 709 filed with your tax return, even if no tax is owed.
Keep records:
Even for annual exclusion gifts, good records help in the event of an IRS audit or when reconciling lifetime exemption use later.
The 5-year 529 rule lets you contribute 5 years of annual exclusion at once to a 529 plan — $95,000 per beneficiary per donor, or $190,000 per couple. Treated as if made ratably over 5 years, so you can't make additional annual exclusion gifts to that beneficiary for 5 years without them counting against lifetime exemption.
Useful for grandparents who want to fund education and move money out of their estate quickly while still using annual exclusion.
Equalizing gifts across beneficiaries. If you're treating children equally, annual exclusion gifts provide a clean way to transfer equal amounts.
Building generational wealth. Small amounts compound. $19,000/year invested at 6% for 20 years grows to about $700,000. For a grandchild.
Reducing a large estate. If you're above the federal exemption ($15M in 2026), annual exclusion gifts are the first line of defense. They don't use your lifetime exemption — pure reduction.
Covering specific expenses. Grandparents paying for summer camp, braces, or club sports indirectly reduce the parents' burden without triggering gift tax.
Horizons models annual exclusion gifts as a recurring expense in your forecast, reducing your projected estate over time. The Gifting Strategy tab lets you set the amount and recipients, and the engine shows the impact on your final taxable estate.
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Gifting Strategy
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