A client from Brooklyn sat in my office last month, determined to give her brownstone to her son. “I want to make it simple,” she said. “I’ll sign the deed over now, so there’s no fighting or court dates when I’m gone.” Her intention was sound—to provide for her family and avoid future conflict. But in estate planning, the simplest-seeming act can carry the most complicated consequences. The impulse to gift a major asset like a home during your lifetime is common, but it is a costly mistake for many.
I find this decision—whether to gift property now or pass it on as an inheritance—is one of the most consequential a family can make. It is a classic case where good intentions can lead to unintended financial strain on the very people you want to help. The difference between these two paths comes down to a single tax concept: the cost basis.
The Hidden Cost of a “Simple” Gift
When you give someone a house, you also give them your tax history with that property. This is the “carry-over basis.” Say you bought a home in Queens in 1995 for $300,000. That purchase price is your original cost basis. Over the decades, you made $50,000 in capital improvements, bringing your adjusted basis to $350,000.
Today, that home is worth $1.5 million. If you gift it to your child, they receive your $350,000 cost basis along with the house. If they sell it a year later for its market value of $1.5 million, they face a capital gains tax on the difference: $1.15 million. At current federal and New York State tax rates, that could trigger a tax bill of hundreds of thousands of dollars.
This is the tax trap hidden inside the “simple” gift. The desire to avoid the probate process creates a far more immediate and expensive problem for the next generation.
Inheritance and the “Stepped-Up” Basis
Consider the alternative. You retain ownership throughout your life and pass the home to your child through a will or a trust. Upon your death, the tax rules work very differently. The property’s cost basis is “stepped up” to the fair market value at the date of death.
Using the same example, your child inherits the home when it is valued at $1.5 million. That value becomes their new cost basis. If they turn around and sell it for $1.5 million, their capital gain is zero. The potential $1.15 million gain is erased for tax purposes. The tax savings are immense—a benefit only available through inheritance.
Clients often believe that avoiding probate is the ultimate goal. While gifting property does remove it from your probate estate, the solution is often worse than the problem. A well-drafted will and a competent executor can move an estate through New York’s Surrogate’s Court efficiently. The proceedings are governed by a clear set of rules under the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 14. For most families, the court process itself is far less burdensome than paying a six-figure capital gains tax.
Gifting, Control, and Long-Term Care Contingencies
Beyond the tax implications, a lifetime gift of property involves a complete surrender of control. Once the deed is transferred, the property is no longer yours. You cannot sell it, take out a mortgage against it, or change your mind if your circumstances change. Your child could sell it, or it could become exposed to their own creditors or a divorce settlement. Stewardship means planning for contingencies, and an outright gift removes your ability to adapt.
There is also the critical issue of long-term care. If you need to apply for Medicaid to cover nursing home costs, the state performs a five-year “look-back.” Any assets you gave away during that period can result in a penalty, making you ineligible for coverage for a period of time. That gift of your home, made with the best of intentions, could jeopardize your ability to get the care you need.
A More Prudent Path
For most families I represent, holding onto the property and allowing it to pass as an inheritance is the most prudent strategy. The tax advantages of the stepped-up basis are simply too significant to ignore. For those concerned about probate or who want more control over the distribution of their assets, a revocable living trust is a far better instrument than an outright gift.
A trust can hold title to the property, allowing you to maintain full control during your lifetime while ensuring a seamless transfer to your beneficiaries upon your death—bypassing probate and preserving the stepped-up basis. This is intentional, deliberate planning that considers all the variables.
The decision is not merely a transaction; it is a fundamental act of legacy planning. It requires weighing immediate desires against the long-term financial health of your family.
Before making any decision about transferring property, the first step is to establish the facts. Gather the original purchase documents for your home and any records of significant improvements. With a clear picture of your cost basis, we can schedule a planning session to model the financial impact of each strategy and design a plan that truly serves your family’s future.




