Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle B— - Estate and Gift Taxes › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - TAX ON GENERATION-SKIPPING TRANSFERS › Subchapter Subchapter F— - Other Definitions and Special Rules › § 2654
When someone makes a generation‑skipping transfer, the tax cost (basis) of the property goes up by the part of the section 2601 tax that applies to the gain (the difference between fair market value and the old basis), but not above the fair market value. Apply any section 1015 basis changes first. If the transfer is a taxable termination that happens at death, the basis is adjusted like section 1014(a) does at death, except any increase or decrease is multiplied by the inclusion ratio if that ratio is less than 1. For this chapter: portions of a trust from different transferors count as separate trusts, and separate, independent shares for different beneficiaries count as separate trusts. Rules about qualified disclaimers are under section 2518. A trustee is not personally responsible for extra section 2601 tax that results from (1) section 2642(c) not applying to a lifetime transfer when no gift tax return was filed, or (2) the inclusion ratio being larger than the ratio shown on the return used to allocate GST exemption.
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Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 2654
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73