If the words “estate tax” make your eyes glaze over, you are in exactly the right place. This guide is written for first-timers — people who have never thought much about what happens to their home, savings, or family business after they pass away. You do not need a finance degree or a law degree to understand the basics, and by the end of this page you will know far more than most New Yorkers do about how the state taxes estates and what you can do about it.
Here is the reassuring headline up front: the vast majority of New York families will never owe a penny of estate tax. The 2026 threshold is high. But New York has a few quirks — especially one called “the cliff” — that can turn a manageable situation into an expensive surprise if no one is paying attention. Understanding the essentials now is how you stay on the safe side of that line.
This page serves New Yorkers statewide — New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate alike. The rules are the same wherever you live in the Empire State.
What Is the New York Estate Tax (and Who Actually Pays It)?
When someone passes away, the total value of everything they owned — home, bank and investment accounts, retirement funds, life insurance, business interests, personal property — is added up. That total is called the gross estate. New York imposes its own estate tax on estates that exceed a certain value. This is separate from any federal estate tax, and it is the New York number that catches most people off guard, because the state threshold is lower than the federal one.
The good news for first-timers: if your estate is comfortably under the 2026 exclusion amount, you simply do not owe New York estate tax. No tax, no special filing burden on that front. The planning conversation then becomes about something more pleasant — making sure your assets pass smoothly, privately, and to the people you intend.
The 2026 Numbers at a Glance
For deaths occurring on or after January 1, 2026 through December 31, 2026, here are the figures that matter:
| Item | 2026 Figure | What It Means in Plain English |
|---|---|---|
| Basic exclusion amount | $7,350,000 | Estates at or under this generally owe no NY estate tax |
| The “cliff” (105% of exclusion) | $7,717,500 | Go over this and you lose the entire exemption |
| Tax rate range | 3% – 16% | Progressive — larger taxable estates pay a higher rate |
| NY gift tax | None | New York does not tax lifetime gifts directly |
| Gift “add-back” window | 3 years | Gifts made within 3 years of death are added back to the taxable estate |
For most families, the takeaway is simple and calming: a $7.35 million exclusion shelters the overwhelming majority of estates entirely.
The “Cliff” — The One New York Quirk You Must Understand
If you remember only one advanced concept from this guide, make it this one.
In most tax systems, going slightly over a threshold means you pay tax only on the amount above it. New York’s estate tax does not work that way at the top. New York gives you the full $7,350,000 exclusion — but only up to a point. Once your taxable estate climbs above 105% of the exclusion ($7,717,500), the exclusion vanishes completely. Your estate is then taxed from the very first dollar, not just the dollars above the line.
That sudden drop-off is why practitioners call it “the cliff.” An estate sitting just below the cliff may owe little or nothing; an estate just above it can owe a substantial six-figure tax. The difference between those two outcomes can come down to relatively modest planning — for example, charitable gifts or other strategies that bring a taxable estate back under the edge.
The lesson for first-timers is not to panic, but to know your number. If your estate is anywhere in the neighborhood of $7 million to $8 million, the cliff is the single most important reason to sit down with an attorney. Falling off it is almost always avoidable with advance planning. Our estate planning overview explains how the full picture fits together.
The 3-Year Gift Add-Back Rule
New Yorkers sometimes hear “New York has no gift tax” and assume they can simply give everything away near the end of life to dodge the estate tax. The state anticipated that.
New York does not impose a separate gift tax — that part is true and welcome. However, any gifts made within three years of death are added back into the taxable estate for purposes of calculating the New York estate tax. In other words, a deathbed transfer does not escape the calculation; it is pulled back in.
Why this matters in essentials terms: timing is everything with gifting strategies. Gifts made well in advance — and structured properly — can be effective planning tools. Gifts made in a rush at the very end generally are not. This is one more reason planning early beats planning late.
How Estate Tax Fits Into a Complete Plan
Estate tax is one piece of a larger puzzle. A comprehensive New York estate plan is not a single document — it is four core documents working together:
- Last Will and Testament — directs who receives your assets and who manages the process. Under EPTL §3-2.1, a valid New York will requires two attesting witnesses, the testator’s signature at the end of the document, and publication (declaring to the witnesses that it is your will). Dying without a will means New York’s intestacy rules under EPTL Article 4 decide who inherits — which may not match your wishes. Learn more on our wills page.
- Trust(s) — governed by EPTL Article 7. A revocable living trust avoids probate and keeps matters private, though it does not by itself save estate tax. An irrevocable trust is the tool used for tax reduction, asset protection, and Medicaid planning (subject to the 5-year look-back). A Supplemental Needs Trust (EPTL 7-1.12) preserves a loved one’s eligibility for government benefits. See our trusts page.
- Durable Power of Attorney — under GOL §5-1513, New York’s power of attorney is durable by default (it stays effective if you become incapacitated). The current 2021 statutory short form is the standard. This handles financial decisions. More on our power of attorney page.
- Health Care Proxy — under New York Public Health Law Article 29-C, this appoints an agent to make medical decisions for you if you cannot. It is separate from the financial POA — two different roles, two different documents. See our health care proxy page.
Notice how these connect to tax. The will and revocable trust govern where assets go; the irrevocable trust is where most legitimate estate-tax and Medicaid planning actually happens. That is why a tax conversation is really an integrated planning conversation.
A Simple, Reassuring Way to Think About Your Situation
Here is an essentials-level checklist to gauge where you stand:
- Estimate your gross estate. Add up everything — and don’t forget that life insurance you own is usually included.
- Compare it to $7,350,000. Comfortably under? Estate tax is unlikely to be your concern; focus instead on a clean will, trusts for probate avoidance and privacy, and your POA and health care proxy.
- Near or above the cliff ($7,717,500)? This is your signal to get professional guidance promptly. The cliff is avoidable with planning.
- Thinking about large gifts? Remember the 3-year add-back, and plan gifts early rather than late.
- Coordinate the four documents. Tax planning that ignores your will, trusts, POA, and proxy is incomplete.
Most readers will land at step 2 and feel relieved. That is the point of getting the essentials straight — so you know whether you have a simple situation or one that genuinely needs tailored attention.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will my family owe New York estate tax in 2026?
Probably not. For 2026, estates at or under the $7,350,000 basic exclusion generally owe no New York estate tax. Only estates that exceed the exclusion — and especially those over the $7,717,500 cliff — face the tax. If your estate is well under that figure, this is usually a non-issue.
What exactly is the New York estate tax “cliff”?
New York gives you the full $7,350,000 exclusion, but only until your taxable estate reaches 105% of it ($7,717,500). Cross that line and you lose the entire exclusion — your estate is taxed from the first dollar, not just the amount over the threshold. It is the most important reason for estates near $7–8 million to plan ahead.
Can I avoid estate tax by giving my money away before I die?
Not at the last minute. New York has no separate gift tax, but gifts made within three years of death are added back into your taxable estate. Early, well-structured gifting can be effective; deathbed transfers generally are not. Timing is everything.
Does a revocable living trust reduce estate tax?
No. A revocable living trust (under EPTL Article 7) is excellent for avoiding probate and keeping your affairs private, but it provides no estate-tax savings on its own. Tax reduction and asset protection typically involve an irrevocable trust, which is a different tool with different trade-offs.
Do I really need all four documents — will, trust, POA, and health care proxy?
For a complete plan, yes. The will and trusts direct your assets, the durable power of attorney (GOL §5-1513) handles finances if you’re incapacitated, and the health care proxy (Public Health Law Article 29-C) handles medical decisions. They cover different jobs and work best when coordinated together.
Get Clear, Confident Answers for Your Situation
You now understand the essentials: the $7.35M exclusion, the cliff at $7,717,500, the 3-year gift add-back, and how estate tax fits into a four-document plan. The next step is to apply these rules to your numbers and your family.
Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group help New Yorkers statewide — from NYC and Long Island to Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate — build clear, coordinated plans and stay on the right side of the cliff.
Schedule your consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq.
Continue learning: explore our statewide estate planning guide, revisit the estate planning overview, or return to this New York estate tax guide any time. For official figures, you can also consult the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance at tax.ny.gov and the Legislature at nysenate.gov.
This guide is general information, not legal advice. Estate tax outcomes depend on your specific facts; consult a qualified New York attorney.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: the New York estate planning guide.