Inheriting property brings complicated feelings. You’ve lost someone you cared about, and now you’re stuck making practical decisions about real estate you never expected to own. If you’re thinking about selling an inherited property in Maryland, you need to know that the tax implications can take a serious bite out of what you walk away with. We help Maryland residents at Crepeau Mourges figure out their tax responsibilities when they’re dealing with inherited assets. The rules aren’t simple. Making smart decisions early can save you thousands.
The Step-Up In Basis Rule
This is one of the best tax breaks you’ll get with inherited property. When you inherit real estate, the property’s tax basis gets adjusted to whatever it was worth on the date the previous owner died. Why does this matter so much? Let’s say your parents bought their home back in 1980 for $50,000. It’s worth $400,000 when you inherit it. Your basis becomes $400,000, not the original purchase price. You don’t owe anything on that $350,000 in appreciation that happened while they owned it. If you turn around and sell the property for $405,000 shortly after inheriting it, you only pay capital gains tax on the $5,000 difference.
Capital Gains Tax Calculations
Here’s something that works in your favor. The holding period for inherited property automatically counts as long-term, no matter how fast you sell after inheriting it. You get the benefit of long-term capital gains rates instead of those higher short-term rates.
For 2024, federal long-term capital gains rates break down like this:
- 0% for taxable income up to $44,625 (single filers)
- 15% for taxable income between $44,626 and $492,300
- 20% for taxable income above $492,300
Maryland doesn’t have a separate capital gains tax rate, which simplifies things a bit. Capital gains get taxed as regular income at state rates ranging from 2% to 5.75%. Where you land depends on your total income level.
Maryland Transfer And Recordation Taxes
When you sell property in Maryland, you’ll face state and local transfer taxes. Buyers and sellers typically split these according to local custom or whatever you negotiate. The state transfer tax sits at 0.5% of the sale price. Then, counties pile on their own transfer taxes. Baltimore County charges an additional 1.5% transfer tax. That brings your total to 2% of the sales price. On a $400,000 sale, you’re looking at $8,000 in transfer taxes alone. These aren’t deductible from your capital gains, but they do reduce your net proceeds.
Reporting Requirements And Documentation
You’ve got to report the sale of inherited property on your federal tax return using Schedule D and Form 8949. The IRS wants documentation proving the property’s fair market value when you inherited it. A professional appraisal dated close to the date of death gives you the strongest evidence of basis. We’ve seen people skip the appraisal, trying to save a few hundred bucks. Then they can’t prove their basis when they sell years later. Don’t make that mistake. A Baltimore County tax lawyer can walk you through proper documentation from the start, which protects you down the road.
Special Situations That Complicate Matters
Some inheritance scenarios create headaches. If you inherit property with a mortgage still on it, or you rent it out before selling, or you make substantial improvements, different rules kick in. Rental income must be reported. You may need to account for depreciation recapture, which catches people off guard. Properties held in certain types of trusts won’t always qualify for a full step-up in basis. If the deceased person placed the property in an irrevocable trust years before death, you might be dealing with a carryover basis instead. That means tracking the original purchase price and every improvement made over potentially decades. It’s messy.
When Multiple Heirs Inherit Together
Siblings or other relatives who inherit property together face tough decisions. Should you sell immediately? Does one heir want to buy out the others? Each heir receives their proportionate share of the stepped-up basis, which matters for calculating everyone’s individual tax liability. If you’re buying out a co-heir, that transaction has its own tax implications separate from an eventual sale to an outside buyer. And honestly, disagreements about timing, price, or who’s handling maintenance costs before sale can tear families apart. We’ve seen it happen. Clear communication helps, and sometimes you need legal guidance to prevent conflicts from getting worse.
Working with a Baltimore County tax lawyer helps you fit the sale into your bigger financial picture. We look at your specific situation to find opportunities for reducing your tax liability while you accomplish what you need to do with the property. Reach out to our team so we can discuss your inherited property and develop a strategy that actually protects your financial interests.