Pub. 17, Chapter 4 - Decedents
The same filing requirements that apply to individuals determine if
a final income tax return must be filed for the decedent. Filing
requirements are discussed in chapter 1.
Filing to get a refund.
A return should be filed to obtain a refund if tax was withheld
from salaries, wages, pensions, or annuities, or if estimated tax was
paid, even if a return is not required to be filed. See Claiming
a refund, later. Also, the decedent may be entitled to other
credits that result in a refund. See chapters 37
and 38 for additional
information on refundable credits.
Determining income and deductions.
The method of accounting regularly used by the decedent before
death generally determines what income you must include and what
deductions you can take on the final return. Generally, individuals
use one of two methods of accounting: cash or accrual.
Cash method.
If the decedent used the cash method of accounting, include only
the items of income actually or constructively received before death
and deduct only the expenses the decedent paid before death. For an
exception for certain medical expenses not paid before death, see
Medical Expenses, under Exemptions and Deductions
in Publication 559.
Accrual method.
If the decedent used an accrual method of accounting, report only
those items of income that the decedent accrued, or earned, before
death. Deduct those expenses the decedent was liable for before death,
regardless of whether the expenses were paid.
Additional information.
For more information on the cash and accrual methods, see
Accounting Methods in chapter 1.
Who must file the return?
The personal representative (defined earlier) must file the final
income tax return of the decedent for the year of death and any
returns not filed for preceding years. A surviving spouse, under
certain circumstances, may have to file the returns for the decedent.
See Joint Return, later.
Example.
Samantha Smith died on March 21, 1999, before filing her 1998 tax
return. Her personal representative must file her 1998 return by April
15, 1999. Her final tax return is due April 17, 2000.
Filing the return.
The word "DECEASED," the decedent's name, and the date of
death should be written across the top of the tax return. In the name
and address space, you should write the name and address of the
decedent and the surviving spouse. If a joint return is not being
filed, the decedent's name should be written in the name space and the
personal representative's name and address should be written in the
remaining space.
Example 1.
John Stone died in early 1999. He was survived by his wife Jane.
Their final joint return included the required information as shown
later in the illustration of the top of Form 1040.
Form 1040 Label and Signature Area
Signing the return.
If a personal representative has been appointed, that person must
sign the return. If it is a joint return, the surviving spouse must
also sign it.
If no personal representative has been appointed, the surviving
spouse (on a joint return) should sign the return and write in the
signature area "Filing as surviving spouse." See Joint
return, later.
If no personal representative has been appointed and if there is no
surviving spouse, the person in charge of the decedent's property must
file and sign the return as "personal representative."
Example 2.
Assume in Example 1 that Mrs. Stone is filing as a surviving
spouse. No personal representative has been appointed. She signs their
final joint return as shown later in the illustration of the bottom of
Form 1040.
Claiming a refund.
Generally, a person who is filing a return for a decedent and
claiming a refund must file Form 1310 with the return. However, if the
person claiming the refund is a surviving spouse filing a joint return
with the decedent, or a court-appointed or certified personal
representative filing an original return for the decedent, Form 1310
is not needed. The personal representative must attach to the return a
copy of the court certificate showing that he or she was appointed the
personal representative.
Example.
Assume that Mr. Green died on January 4, 1999, before filing his
tax return. On April 3 of the same year, you were appointed the
personal representative for Mr. Green's estate and you filed his Form
1040 showing a refund due. You do not need Form 1310 to claim the
refund if you attach a copy of the court certificate showing you were
appointed the personal representative.
When and where to file.
The final individual income tax return is due at the same time the
decedent's return would have been due had death not occurred. The
final return for a decedent who was a calendar year taxpayer is
generally due April 15 following the year death occurred. However,
when the due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, you
can file on the next business day.
Generally, you must file the final income tax return of the
decedent with the Internal Revenue Service center for the place where
you live. A tax return for a decedent cannot be electronically filed
under the e-file or On-Line Filing Program. A paper tax
return must be filed for the decedent.
Request for prompt assessment (charge) of tax.
The IRS ordinarily has 3 years from the date an income tax return
is filed, or its due date, whichever is later, to charge any
additional tax that is due. However, as a personal representative, you
may request a prompt assessment of tax after the return has been
filed. This reduces the time for making the assessment to 18 months
from the date the written request for prompt assessment was received.
This request can be made for any income tax return of the decedent and
for the income tax return of the decedent's estate. This may permit a
quicker settlement of the tax liability of the estate and an earlier
final distribution of the assets to the beneficiaries.
You can request prompt assessment of any of the decedent's taxes
(other than federal estate taxes) for any years for which the
statutory period for assessment is open. This applies even though the
returns were filed before the decedent's death.
Failure to report income.
If you or the decedent failed to report substantial amounts of
gross income (more than 25% of the gross income reported on the
return) or filed a false or fraudulent return, your request for prompt
assessment will not shorten the period during which the IRS may assess
the additional tax. However, such a request may relieve you of
personal liability for the tax if you did not have knowledge of the
unpaid tax.
How to request.
You can use Form 4810, to make this request. It must be filed
separately from any other document. The request should be filed with
the IRS office where the return was filed. If Form 4810 is not used,
you must clearly indicate that it is a request for prompt assessment
under section 6501(d) of the Internal Revenue Code. You must identify
the type of tax and the tax period for which the prompt assessment is
requested.
Request for discharge from personal liability for
tax.
An executor can make a written request for a discharge from
personal liability for a decedent's income and gift taxes. The request
must be made after the returns for those taxes are filed. For this
purpose an executor is an executor or administrator that is appointed,
qualified, and acting within the United States.
Within 9 months after receipt of the request, the IRS will notify
the executor of the amount of taxes due. If this amount is paid, the
executor will be discharged from personal liability for any future
deficiencies. If the IRS has not notified the executor, he or she will
be discharged from personal liability at the end of the 9-month
period.
Even
if the executor is discharged, the IRS will still be able to assess
tax deficiencies against the executor to the extent that he or she still
has any of the decedent's property.
Form 5495.
Form 5495 can be used for making this request. If Form 5495 is not
used, you must clearly indicate that the request is for discharge from
personal liability under section 6905 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Joint return.
Generally, the personal representative and the surviving spouse can
file a joint return for the decedent and the surviving spouse.
However, the surviving spouse alone can file the joint return if no
personal representative has been appointed before the due date for
filing the final joint return for the year of death. This also applies
to the return for the preceding year if the decedent died after the
close of the preceding tax year and before the due date for filing
that return. The income of the decedent that was includible on his or
her return for the year up to the date of death and the income of the
surviving spouse for the entire year must be included in the final
joint return.
A final joint return with the decedent cannot be filed if the
surviving spouse remarried before the end of the year of the
decedent's death. The filing status of the decedent in this instance
is "married filing separate return."
Personal representative may revoke joint return
election.
A court-appointed personal representative may revoke an election to
file a joint return that was previously made by the surviving spouse
alone. This is done by filing a separate return for the decedent
within one year from the due date of the return (including any
extensions). The joint return made by the surviving spouse will then
be regarded as the separate return of that spouse by excluding the
decedent's items and refiguring the tax liability.
How To Report Certain Income
This section explains how to report certain types of income on the
final return. The rules on income discussed in the other chapters of
this publication also apply to a decedent's final return. See chapters 6
through 17, if they apply.
Interest and Dividend Income
(Forms 1099)
A Form 1099 should be received for the decedent reporting interest
and dividends that were includible on his or her return before death.
A separate Form 1099 should be received showing the interest and
dividends includible on the returns of the estate or other recipient
after the date of death and payable to the estate or other recipient.
You can request corrected Forms 1099 if these forms do not properly
reflect the right recipient or amounts.
The amount reported on Form 1099-INT, Interest Income,
or Form 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions,
may not necessarily be the correct amount that should be
properly reported on each income tax return. For example, a Form
1099-INT reporting interest payable to a decedent may include
income that should be reported on the final income tax return of the
decedent, as well as income that the estate or other recipient should
report, either as income earned after death or as income in respect of
the decedent (discussed later). For income earned after death, you
should ask the payer for a Form 1099 that properly identifies the
recipient (by name and identification number) and the proper amount.
If that is not possible, or if the form includes an amount that
represents income in respect of the decedent, include an explanation,
as shown next under How to report, describing the amounts
that are properly reported on the decedent's final return.
How to report.
If you are preparing the decedent's final return and you have
received a Form 1099-INT or Form 1099-DIV for the decedent
that includes amounts belonging to the decedent and to another
recipient (the decedent's estate or another beneficiary), report the
total interest shown on Form 1099-INT on Schedule 1 (Form 1040A)
or on Schedule B (Form 1040). Next, enter a "subtotal" of the
interest shown on Forms 1099 and the interest reportable from other
sources for which you did not receive Forms 1099. Show any interest
(including any interest you receive as a nominee) belonging to another
recipient separately and subtract it from the subtotal. Identify this
adjustment as a "Nominee Distribution" or other appropriate
designation. Report dividend income on the appropriate schedule using
the same procedure.
Note.
If the decedent received amounts as a nominee, you must give the
actual owner a Form 1099, unless the owner is the decedent's spouse.
Accelerated Death Benefits
Accelerated death benefits are amounts received under a life
insurance contract before the death of the insured individual. These
benefits also include amounts received on the sale or assignment of
the contract to a viatical settlement provider. This exclusion applies
only if the insured was a terminally or chronically ill individual.
Generally, if the decedent received accelerated death benefits
either on his or her own life or on the life of another person, those
benefits are not included in the decedent's income. For more
information, see the discussion under Gifts, Insurance, and
Inheritances under Other Tax Information in
Publication 559.
Business Income
This section discusses some of the business income which may have
to be included on the final return.
Partnership income.
The death of a partner closes the partnership's tax year for that
partner. Generally, it does not close the partnership's tax year for
the remaining partners. The decedent's distributive share of
partnership items must be figured as if the partnership's tax year
ended on the date the partner died. To avoid an interim closing of the
partnership books, the partners can agree to estimate the decedent's
distributive share by prorating the amounts the partner would have
included for the entire partnership tax year.
On the decedent's final return, include the decedent's distributive
share of partnership items for the following periods.
- The partnership tax year which ended within or with the
decedent's last tax year (the year ending on the date of
death).
- The period, if any, from the end of that partnership tax
year (item (1)) to the decedent's date of death.
S corporation income.
If the decedent was a shareholder in an S corporation, you must
include on the final return the decedent's share of the S
corporation's items of income, loss, deduction, and credit for the
corporation's tax year that ends within or with the decedent's last
tax year (the year ending on the date of death). The final return must
also include the decedent's pro rata share of these items for the
period between the end of that corporation's tax year and the date of
death.
Self-employment income.
Include self-employment income actually or constructively received
or accrued, depending on the decedent's accounting method. For
self-employment tax purposes only, the decedent's self-employment
income will include the decedent's distributive share of a
partnership's income or loss through the end of the month in which
death occurred. For this purpose, the partnership income or loss is
considered to be earned ratably over the partnership's tax year. For
more information on how to compute self-employment income, see
Publication 533,
Self-Employment Tax.
Medical Savings Account (MSA)
The treatment of a medical savings account (MSA), including a
Medicare+Choice MSA, at the death of the account holder depends
on who acquires the interest in the account. If the decedent's estate
acquires the interest, the fair market value of the assets in the
account on the date of death is included in gross income on the
decedent's final return. The estate tax deduction, discussed later,
does not apply to this amount.
If a beneficiary acquires the interest, see the discussion under
Income in Respect of the Decedent, later. For other
information on MSAs, see Publication 969,
Medical Savings
Accounts (MSAs).
Individual retirement arrangements (IRAs).
The treatment of a decedent's IRAs, including education IRAs and
Roth IRAs, is covered in Publication 559.
Exemptions, Deductions, and Credits
Generally, the rules for exemptions, deductions, and credits
allowed to an individual also apply to the decedent's final income tax
return. Show on the final return deductible items the decedent paid
before death (or accrued, if the decedent reported deductions on an
accrual method).
Exemptions
You can claim the personal exemption in full on a final income tax return.
If the decedent was another person's dependent (for example, a parent's),
you cannot claim the personal exemption on the decedent's final return.
Standard Deduction
If you do not itemize deductions on the final return, the full amount of the
appropriate standard deduction is allowed regardless of the date of
death. For information on the appropriate standard deduction, see chapter
21.
Itemized Deductions
If the total of the decedent's itemized deductions is more than the
decedent's standard deduction, the federal income tax will generally
be less if you claim itemized deductions on the final return. See
chapters 23
through 30 for the types of expenses that are allowed as
itemized deductions.
Medical expenses.
Medical expenses paid before death by the decedent are deductible,
subject to limits, on the final income tax return if deductions are
itemized. This includes expenses for the decedent as well as for the
decedent's spouse and dependents.
Qualified
medical expenses paid before death by the decedent are not deductible
if paid with a tax-free distribution from any medical savings account.
For information on medical expenses that were not paid before
death, see Medical Expenses under Exemptions and
Deductions in Publication 559.
Unrecovered investment in pension.
If the decedent was receiving a pension or annuity and died without
a surviving annuitant, you can take a deduction on the decedent's final
return for the amount of the decedent's investment in the pension or
annuity contract that remained unrecovered at death. The deduction is
a miscellaneous itemized deduction that is not subject to the 2% limit
on adjusted gross income. See chapter 30.
Deduction for Losses
A decedent's net operating loss deduction from a prior year and any capital
losses (capital losses include capital loss carryovers) can be deducted
only on the decedent's final income tax return. A net operating loss
on the decedent's final income tax return can be carried back to prior
years. You cannot deduct any unused net operating loss or capital loss
on the estate's income tax return.
Credits
Any of the tax credits discussed in this publication also apply to
the final return if the decedent was eligible for the credits at the
time of death. These credits are discussed in chapters 33
through 38
of this publication.
Tax withheld and estimated payments.
There may have been income tax withheld from the decedent's pay,
pensions, or annuities before death and the decedent may have paid
estimated income tax. To get credit for these tax payments, you must
claim them on the decedent's final return. For more information, see
Credit for Withholding and Estimated Tax in chapter 5.
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