USA TODAY International Edition

Families of COVID- 19 dead grapple with filing taxes

Liabilitie­s can complicate the lives of survivors. Here are tips for navigating the laws.

- Jessica Menton

When someone passes away, their tax headaches don’t die with them.

In fact, those obligation­s can further complicate the lives of survivors: Federal estate taxes may be due and state inheritanc­e taxes could come into play as well.

“You still have to reconcile tax liabilitie­s in the year of death when you had income,” says Mark Steber, Chief Tax Informatio­n Officer at Jackson Hewitt. “Sooner or later someone will have to clean it up, and it usually falls to a family member.”

Melissa Burgess is one of those people. When her father passed away suddenly in early 2018, she filed his 2017 return while a lawyer helped file his 2018 return through her father’s estate.

Yet Burgess, who lives in Buffalo, New York, is still waiting on her father’s 2017 tax refund from the IRS. And the pandemic has made it even more challengin­g for her and her sister to get in contact with the agency since it has been overwhelme­d by sweeping tax code changes even as it sends stimulus checks to millions.

“It’s been very frustratin­g,” says Burgess, 30, who is a clerk at a local library. “If the pandemic hadn’t happened, then maybe things would be resolved by now.”

Adding to her frustratio­ns, the IRS mistakenly sent a $ 1,200 stimulus check to her late father last spring that she had to send back, she says.

“This is the last piece of the puzzle for my father’s estate. How am I still having to deal with this three years later? My dad is owed this money. I’m not going to give up until I get it.”

“This is the last piece of the puzzle for my father’s estate. How am I still having to deal with this three years later?” Melissa Burgess

Filing the final return

The filing of the deceased taxpayer’s final return typically falls to the executor or administra­tor of the estate. If neither is named, then it’s taken over by a survivor of the deceased, according to Lisa GreeneLewi­s, a CPA at TurboTax.

“This likely impacted many families in 2020 due to the pandemic,” Greene- Lewis says.

Those survivors are not only stressed about complicate­d tax paperwork, but they’re also in mourning.

“The final year of a tax return is a sensitive topic because you’re dealing with emotions and fragile feelings,” says Steber, who says family members who are suddenly responsibl­e for their loved ones’ taxes shouldn’t go it alone. “When the time comes, get experience­d help.

The final return is filed on IRS Form 1040, the same one that would have been used if the taxpayer were alive. The difference is that “deceased” is written after the taxpayer’s name, Greene- Lewis says.

If the taxpayer was married, the widow or widower may file a joint return for the year of death. For the two years following a person’s death, the surviving spouse can file as a qualifying widow or widower, which would allow them to continue to use the same tax brackets that apply to married- filing- jointly returns.

The bigger the estate, the more complex

The bigger the estate and the larger the income is for a decedent, the more complex the situation will likely become, which creates a greater need for a tax profession­al, Steber says.

“Make this a part of your will and put an executor in charge,” Steber advises.

The estate tax, for instance, is charged on a person’s assets when they die. A 40% federal estate tax applies to estate values that exceed $ 11.7 million, or $ 23.4 million per married couple, though fewer than 2,000 households are expected to pay estate taxes for last year, according to the Tax Policy Center.

The Biden administra­tion is expected to propose a lower estate tax exemption, which would subject more estates to tax after a death. Biden has called for lowering the exemption to $ 3.5 million for estates.

Eric Pierre, founder, CEO and principal of Pierre Accounting, says his firm has received an increase in estate planning this year.

“The pandemic has gotten people’s attention. Anyone can die at a moment’s notice. But now that people are dying of COVID, I think it really woke them up about that reality to make sure they have a plan in place.”

Distinguis­hing between who needs an estate vs. who needs a simple will depends on individual circumstan­ces, Pierre adds. For those who own real estate or substantiv­e assets, they should have an estate, he recommends.

When is the deadline?

The deadline to file a final return is the tax filing deadline of the year following the taxpayer’s death, which would be May 17 for 2020 returns after the IRS extended the deadline this tax season.

Sign the return

If an executor or administra­tor is involved, he or she must sign the return for the decedent. When a joint return is filed, the spouse also must sign.

When there isn’t an executor or administra­tor, whoever is responsibl­e for filing the return should sign the return and note that he or she is signing “on behalf of the decedent.”

If a joint return is filed by the surviving spouse alone, he or she should sign the return and write “filing as surviving spouse” in the space for the other spouse’s signature.

What if a refund is due?

There’s one more step if a refund is due.

If the decedent is owed the money, it can be claimed using IRS Form 1310, Statement of a Person Claiming Refund Due a Deceased Taxpayer, according to Greene- Lewis.

Although the IRS says that surviving spouses filing a joint return don’t have to file with this form, tax experts suggest it’s still a good idea to include to head off possible delays.

Who gets the refund?

The refund, if it is solely in the name of the decedent, will be distribute­d to heirs or beneficiaries, according to Pierre.

If the decedent has a surviving spouse, they can get the refund on a married filing joint return.

What happens if a decedent owes taxes?

If a decedent owes taxes, the tax bill is supposed to be settled by the decedent’s estate’s executor, says Pierre.

In the event that the decedent has insufficient funds to cover the federal income and estate taxes, the relatives aren’t responsibl­e for the remaining balance, Pierre adds.

The executor of the estate can be held liable if the executor distribute­s assets to heirs and beneficiaries before paying the taxes, or if the executor pays off other debts of the estate before paying the tax liabilitie­s, or if the executive is aware of the insufficient funds and inability to pay the taxes but spends the assets otherwise, he says.

To be sure, a relative can be on the hook for one of the following: co- signing a loan with the decedent if they were a joint account holder; a resident of a community property state where a surviving spouse can be held liable for debts if the state requires the surviving spouse to pay off debts; or if they share in the debt, according to Pierre.

“If you’re alive and well, get a life insurance policy and at least have a simple will,” says Pierre. “Depending on your wealth, look at getting an estate. If you don’t and something unexpected happens, it could take years to figure out how assets should be settled.”

“If you don’t prepare,” Pierre adds, “you’ll be preparing to fail.”

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 ?? PROVIDED BY MELISSA BURGESS ?? Melissa Burgess, center, with her sister and father, is waiting on her father’s 2017 tax refund.
PROVIDED BY MELISSA BURGESS Melissa Burgess, center, with her sister and father, is waiting on her father’s 2017 tax refund.

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