New Jersey inheritance tax calculator
Pick your relationship to the person who passed away, then enter the amount you’re inheriting. We’ll estimate what you owe.
Beneficiary class
Class A
Estimated tax
$0
You’d keep
$500,000
Spouses, children, grandchildren, and parents owe nothing under New Jersey law.
This is an estimate based on New Jersey’s beneficiary classes and current rates. It doesn’t account for prior gifts, other exemptions, or your full estate picture. For an exact number, talk to an attorney.
Book a consultationUpdated for 2025–2026 New Jersey rules. New Jersey’s inheritance tax regulations were readopted in November 2025, with amendments effective December 15, 2025. This article reflects those changes.
If you’ve recently inherited, or expect to inherit, assets from someone in New Jersey, one of the first questions you’re likely asking is whether you’ll owe tax on it. The answer depends almost entirely on your relationship to the person who passed away.
New Jersey does not have a state estate tax. That was repealed in 2018. But it does still impose an inheritance tax, and it’s one of the few states that does. This is a tax paid by the person who inherits, not by the estate itself. Whether you owe anything, and how much, comes down to which “class” of beneficiary you fall into.
How New Jersey Classifies Beneficiaries
New Jersey groups beneficiaries into classes based on their relationship to the deceased. Your class determines your tax rate, and whether you pay anything at all.
Class A beneficiaries are fully exempt from inheritance tax. This group includes:
- Spouses and civil union partners
- Children, stepchildren, and adopted children
- Grandchildren and other lineal descendants
- Parents and grandparents
Important 2025 update: The December 2025 regulation amendments expressly added non-biological children conceived through assisted reproductive technology to the Class A category. If your family includes children born through IVF or other assisted reproduction methods, New Jersey now explicitly recognizes them as Class A beneficiaries, meaning they inherit free of tax.
Class C beneficiaries include siblings, sons-in-law, and daughters-in-law. The first $25,000 they inherit is exempt. Anything above that is taxed at rates between 11% and 16%, depending on the total value inherited.
Class D beneficiaries are friends, more distant relatives, and anyone not covered by the other classes. There is no exemption for Class D. The entire inheritance is taxed at 15% to 16%.
Class E beneficiaries, charities, religious organizations, educational institutions, and qualifying nonprofits, are fully exempt.
Quick Reference
| Beneficiary class | Who it includes | Exemption | Tax rate |
| Class A | Spouse, children, grandchildren, parents | Full exemption | 0% |
| Class C | Siblings, sons/daughters-in-law | $25,000 | 11–16% |
| Class D | Friends, distant relatives | None | 15–16% |
| Class E | Charities, nonprofits | Full exemption | 0% |
What Assets Are Subject to the Tax?
New Jersey inheritance tax applies to most assets the deceased owned at the time of death, including:
- Real estate located in New Jersey
- Bank accounts and cash
- Stocks, bonds, and investments
- Personal property, jewelry, vehicles, collectibles
- Tangible property physically located in New Jersey
One rule catches many families off guard: gifts made within three years of the person’s death are still subject to inheritance tax under New Jersey’s “look-back” rule. If your parent gave you $50,000 eighteen months before they died, that gift may be taxable.
If the deceased was not a New Jersey resident but owned property in the state, that property may still be subject to New Jersey inheritance tax.
What Changed in December 2025
New Jersey readopted its inheritance tax regulations in November 2025, with amendments effective December 15, 2025. These rules remain in effect through November 2032. Here’s what changed and why it matters:
Class A definition expanded. As noted above, children conceived through assisted reproductive technology are now explicitly included as Class A beneficiaries. This matters for blended families and modern family structures where a biological connection wasn’t established in the traditional sense. If this applies to your family, your estate plan should reflect it, especially beneficiary designations on accounts, life insurance policies, and the language in your will or trust.
Waivers now required from all financial institutions. Previously, only banks, trust companies, and deposit companies were required to obtain a New Jersey inheritance tax waiver before releasing assets to beneficiaries. Under the 2025 amendments, the requirement extends to all financial institutions. This means brokerage accounts, investment accounts, and assets held at non-bank financial companies are now covered.
The 10-day waiting period is gone. Under the old rules, there was a mandatory 10-business-day waiting period before the Division of Taxation could issue a waiver. That waiting period has been eliminated. Waivers can now be issued without delay, which means beneficiaries can access accounts faster, provided the paperwork is handled correctly.
These changes don’t alter who pays tax or how much. But they affect how estates are administered after death, how quickly accounts can be accessed, and whether your current estate plan properly accounts for your family’s structure.
How to Reduce or Avoid New Jersey Inheritance Tax
You can reduce or avoid New Jersey inheritance tax. Lifetime gifting, charitable giving, and certain trusts all help. Class A and Class E beneficiaries already pay nothing. For everyone else, these strategies, started early, can lower what your family owes.
Start with gifts. If you give more than three years before you pass away, that gift stays out of reach of the tax. Give within three years, and it still counts as part of your estate.
Charitable gifts work differently. Any amount you leave to a qualifying charity is fully exempt, no matter when you give it.
Trusts offer another path. An irrevocable life insurance trust, for example, can move assets outside your taxable estate altogether. The right structure depends on what you own and who you’re leaving it to.
Which of these fits your family depends on your beneficiaries and your assets. A short conversation with an estate planning attorney can show you what applies to your situation, and what doesn’t.
Tax Waivers and Filing
A New Jersey inheritance tax waiver is required before most financial institutions will release assets to beneficiaries. The 2025 amendments expanded which institutions must obtain one and eliminated the old waiting period, so the process can move faster now than it did before.
For Class A beneficiaries, no inheritance tax is due. However, an Affidavit for Real Property Tax Waiver may still be needed to transfer certain assets without filing a full tax return.
For non-exempt beneficiaries, the inheritance tax return (Form IT-R) must be filed within eight months of the date of death. Taxes paid after that deadline accrue interest and penalties. The executor or administrator of the estate is responsible for filing.
Federal Estate Tax, A Brief Note
New Jersey no longer has a state estate tax. But the federal estate tax still applies to large estates. For 2025, the federal exemption is $13.99 million per individual ($27.98 million for married couples using portability). Estates below those thresholds owe no federal estate tax. Amounts above are taxed at up to 40%.
The vast majority of New Jersey families will never owe federal estate tax. But if your estate is substantial, coordinating federal and state planning is worth doing with an attorney.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is exempt from New Jersey inheritance tax?
Class A beneficiaries, spouses, civil union partners, children (including those conceived through assisted reproduction, under the 2025 amendments), grandchildren, parents, and grandparents, pay no inheritance tax. Class E beneficiaries, such as charities and nonprofits, are also fully exempt.
What assets are subject to New Jersey inheritance tax?
Most assets owned by the deceased at death, including real estate, bank accounts, investments, and personal property in New Jersey. Gifts made within three years of death may also be included under the look-back rule.
How much is the New Jersey inheritance tax?
Class C beneficiaries pay 11–16% on amounts above $25,000. Class D beneficiaries pay 15–16% on the full amount with no exemption. Class A and Class E beneficiaries pay nothing.
Do I need to file an inheritance tax return?
If you’re a non-exempt beneficiary (Class C or D) who inherits taxable assets, yes. Form IT-R must be filed within eight months of the decedent’s death.
What changed with the December 2025 amendments?
Three things: the Class A definition now expressly includes children conceived through assisted reproduction; the waiver requirement was extended to all financial institutions; and the 10-day waiting period for waiver issuance was eliminated.
Can an attorney help me reduce my inheritance tax exposure?
Yes. Strategies like lifetime gifting, charitable bequests, trust planning, and making sure your beneficiary designations align with your goals can meaningfully reduce what non-exempt beneficiaries owe. An estate planning attorney can assess your specific situation and make sure your plan reflects current New Jersey law.
We’re Here to Help
New Jersey’s inheritance tax rules changed at the end of 2025, and estate plans that predate those amendments may need a review, particularly if your family includes children through assisted reproduction, blended family arrangements, or assets held at non-bank financial institutions.
Benjamin D. Eckman, Esq. focuses exclusively on elder law and estate planning for New Jersey families. If you have questions about how these rules apply to your situation, or want to make sure your current plan is up to date, schedule a consultation here.






