By Ian Weinstock and Heather Fincher
After 15 years of waiting, we now have final regulations providing guidance on the tax imposed by Internal Revenue Code Section 2801 (the “Section 2801 tax”) for U.S. citizens and residents who receive gifts or bequests from certain individuals who have expatriated from the United States. Importantly, taxpayers will soon finally have guidance on the method of reporting and paying the Section 2801 tax with the imminent promulgation of Form 708, United States Return of Tax for Gifts and Bequests Received from Covered Expatriates (“Form 708”).
The Section 2801 Tax
The Section 2801 tax is essentially a 40 percent[1] federal inheritance tax on U.S. citizens and U.S. residents (including domestic trusts, and also foreign trusts that elect to be treated as domestic trusts for Section 2801 purposes) who receive any covered gift or bequest. A “covered gift or bequest” means any property acquired from a covered expatriate or from a foreign trust funded by a covered expatriate.[2] In other words, the Section 2801 tax is imposed on recipients of transfers (which is why it is characterized as an inheritance tax) that would otherwise escape the reach of the U.S. gift and estate tax system as a consequence of the donor’s or decedent’s expatriation. The tax is imposed on the value of the gift or bequest, although only to the extent that value exceeds the annual exclusion for gifts ($19,000 for 2025).[3]
A “covered expatriate” is (i) an expatriate, i.e., any U.S. citizen who relinquishes citizenship or any green card holder whose status is revoked or abandoned at a time when the person was a lawful permanent resident of the United States in at least 8 of the past 15 years, who (ii) at the time of expatriation, had a worldwide net worth of $2 million or more, had an average annual U.S. federal income tax liability above a certain threshold ($206,000 for 2025), or who failed to certify under penalties of perjury that she or he was in compliance with all U.S. federal tax obligations for the preceding five years. Covered expatriates are subject to special U.S. tax rules under Code Section 877A, often referred to as the “exit tax.”
Unlike the gift and estate taxes, which are payable by the donor or the decedent’s estate, for purposes of the Section 2801 tax, the recipient of the covered gift or bequest is liable for reporting and paying the tax. Until now, the reporting requirement related to the Section 2801 tax has been deferred.
The Final Regulations
On January 10, 2025, Treasury and the IRS released TD 10027, Guidance under Section 2801 Regarding the Imposition of Tax on Certain Gifts and Bequests from Covered Expatriates (the “final regulations”), the long-awaited finalized regulations that were first proposed[4] in September 2015 (the “proposed regulations”).
Interestingly, although the final regulations clarify that they apply to covered gifts and bequests received on or after January 1, 2025, they are silent on the last sixteen years since Section 2801 was enacted in June 2008. Early IRS guidance (Notice 2009-85) indicated that reporting and tax obligations under Section 2801 for covered gifts or bequests received after June 2008 would be deferred until issuance of final IRS guidance. The proposed regulations reiterated the concept of deferral without further explanation. But the final regulations seem to be silent on the issue. Consequently, until Form 708 and its accompanying instructions are issued, we will not know for sure, but the final regulations’ deafening silence on this topic seems to indicate that it is at least possible that recipients of covered gifts or bequests between June 17, 2008, and January 1, 2025, may be off the hook entirely from a tax and reporting standpoint.
Aside from the deferral issue, the final regulations generally adopt the proposed regulations, though with a few modifications, which include the following:
In summary, taxpayers need to be aware that the final regulations now mandate reporting of covered gifts and bequests and contain detailed rules about how to fulfill this obligation. Form 708 has yet to be promulgated, but the information and reporting requirements are now finalized.
[1] Technically, the rate imposed is the highest rate specified in Internal Revenue Code (“Code”) Section 2001(c) in effect on the date of receipt, which is currently equal to 40%.
[2] Limited exemptions apply, for example, for amounts transferred to a U.S. citizen spouse or to a charity, or for a gift or bequest that is reported on a timely filed gift or estate tax return.
[3] The Section 2801 tax may be further reduced by any gift or estate tax paid to a foreign country with respect to such gift or bequest.