For deaths occurring on or after January 1, 2026 through December 31, 2026, New York exempts the first $7,350,000 of an estate from the New York State estate tax. But there is a trap most people have never heard of: the “cliff.” If your taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exemption — $7,717,500 — you lose the entire exemption and your estate is taxed from the very first dollar, not just the amount above the threshold. That single feature makes New York’s estate tax very different from the federal system, and it is the reason careful planning can save a family hundreds of thousands of dollars. This guide explains, in plain English, how the 2026 exemption and cliff work and what you can do about them.
What the New York Estate Tax Actually Is
The New York estate tax is a tax on the value of everything you own at death — real estate, bank and investment accounts, retirement accounts, business interests, and life insurance you control — after debts and certain deductions. It is separate from, and in addition to, the federal estate tax, which has a much higher exemption. Many New Yorkers who will never owe a dime of federal estate tax can still owe a substantial New York estate tax, simply because New York’s exemption is far lower.
For 2026, the key numbers are:
| Figure | 2026 Amount | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Basic exclusion (exemption) | $7,350,000 | Estates at or below this owe no NY estate tax |
| The cliff (105% of exemption) | $7,717,500 | Cross this and the exemption disappears entirely |
| Tax rate range | 3% – 16% | Progressive; higher rates apply to larger estates |
| NY gift tax | None | But see the 3-year add-back below |
How the Cliff Works — A Plain-English Example
The cliff is the single most important concept in New York estate planning. Under the federal system, you only pay tax on the amount above the exemption. New York does not work that way.
- Estate of $7,350,000 (at the exemption): owes $0 in New York estate tax.
- Estate of $7,717,500 (at the cliff, 105%): the exemption is fully phased out, and the entire estate is taxable — the tax bill jumps to roughly $680,000.
In other words, going from $7.35M to $7.72M — an increase of about $367,000 in value — can create a tax bill of several hundred thousand dollars. The estate is worse off for being slightly larger. Families who fall into this “cliff zone” between $7,350,000 and $7,717,500 are the ones who most urgently need planning, because the right strategy can pull the taxable estate back under the exemption and wipe out the tax entirely.
The 3-Year Gift Add-Back
New York has no gift tax — you can give money away during your lifetime without a New York gift tax. But there is an important catch: any gifts you make within three years of your death are added back into your taxable estate. This rule exists to stop people from giving everything away on their deathbed to escape the cliff.
The planning lesson is simple: lifetime gifting can be a powerful tool to stay under the exemption, but it works best when done early and consistently, not in a panic at the end of life. Time is the most valuable asset in estate-tax planning.
How a Good Estate Plan Reduces the Tax
You cannot fix a cliff problem with a will alone. A will controls who receives your property, but it does nothing to shrink the size of your taxable estate. Reducing New York estate tax — or avoiding the cliff — usually requires coordinated tools working together. A comprehensive plan combines a will, one or more trusts, a durable power of attorney, and a health care proxy, all drafted to work as a unit.
- Will (EPTL §3-2.1). The foundation of every plan. New York requires two attesting witnesses, that the testator sign at the end of the document, and that the testator “publish” the will (declare to the witnesses that it is their will). Dying without one means the state’s intestacy rules under EPTL Article 4 decide who inherits — and intestacy offers no tax planning at all. Learn more on our Wills page.
- Trusts (EPTL Article 7). A revocable living trust avoids probate but provides no estate-tax savings, because you still control the assets. An irrevocable trust is the workhorse of estate-tax reduction: by giving up control, you can move assets out of your taxable estate, protect them from creditors, and plan for Medicaid (subject to the 5-year look-back). A supplemental needs trust (EPTL 7-1.12) preserves a disabled beneficiary’s public benefits. See our Trusts page for details.
- Durable Power of Attorney (GOL §5-1513). New York’s statutory short form (updated in 2021) lets a trusted agent manage your finances if you become incapacitated. It is durable by default, meaning it survives your incapacity — which is exactly when you need it. A POA also lets your agent continue tax and gifting strategies if you can no longer act. Visit our Power of Attorney page.
- Health Care Proxy (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 and is an essential part of any complete plan.
Used together, these documents let an attorney structure your estate so that assets are positioned below the exemption, gifts are timed correctly, and your wishes are carried out without unnecessary tax. For an overview of how the pieces fit, see our Estate Planning Overview.
Who Should Worry About the 2026 Cliff?
You should review your plan now if any of the following describe you:
- Your total assets — including your home, retirement accounts, and life insurance — approach or exceed $7,350,000.
- You own New York real estate that has appreciated significantly.
- You own a business or professional practice.
- You have a life insurance policy you own and control (the death benefit counts toward your estate).
- You are between $7.35M and $7.72M and may be sitting directly in the cliff zone.
Even if you are comfortably below the exemption today, growth in your investments or real estate can push you over the line by the time of death. Estate-tax planning is forward-looking.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does every New Yorker owe estate tax?
No. Only estates that exceed the $7,350,000 exemption owe New York estate tax in 2026. The majority of estates fall below that figure and owe nothing — but they still benefit from a will, trust, POA, and health care proxy.
What is the difference between the federal and New York estate tax?
The federal exemption is much higher, so many people owe no federal estate tax but still owe New York estate tax because of New York’s lower exemption and its cliff. New York’s tax can apply even when the federal tax does not.
Can I just give my money away to avoid the cliff?
You can — New York has no gift tax — but gifts made within three years of death are added back to your taxable estate. Gifting works as a planning tool when done early and as part of a coordinated strategy, not as a last-minute fix.
Does a revocable living trust save estate tax?
No. A revocable living trust helps you avoid probate and manage assets, but because you keep control, the assets remain in your taxable estate. Estate-tax savings generally require an irrevocable trust.
Talk to a New York Estate Planning Attorney
The 2026 exemption and cliff make this an ideal time to review your plan — especially if your estate is anywhere near $7.35 million. At Morgan Legal Group, Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team build coordinated estate plans for clients across New York State, designed to manage the cliff, time gifts correctly, and protect what you’ve built.
Schedule your 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. →
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: the New York estate planning guide.