First off: I'm a permanent resident, I'm liable for gift tax. Coming from a country with effectively zero gift or inheritance tax for most people, I'm trying to wrap my head around how this will work.
I recently purchased an old house in Japan and will be making renovations to it this year that should qualify me for the 5 million yen gift tax exemption for a gift from my parents to help pay for the renovations.
At the same time, my parents might want to gift more than this amount towards renovation work. It might make sense for me to chose the settlement at time of inheritance system. My understanding based on this NTA document is that it is possible to use the 5 million yen exemption in combination with the settlement system.
However, this is where I start getting confused about the future implications. That same NTA document says that you can use the settlement system for both your mother and father separately.
By and large, my parents' money is in joint accounts, which, of course, don't exist in Japan. If one of my parents were to pass away, as far as I know, their money would pass to the spouse, not to me. I would not inherit anything until the death of both parents.
So, how does this relate to the settlement system? Let's say that I'm very lucky, and my parents each send me 25 million yen in gifts. Under the settlement system, I would so far pay nothing.
Then, if one parent passed away, I would inherit nothing at that point, so under the settlement system, I would owe no inheritance tax at that point. Unless I've missed something.
When the second parent passed away, I would then possibly owe inheritance tax on the excess over the standard exemption, if any.
But, at that point, would I need to include the 25 million yen of gifts in that calculation, or 50 million based on the gifts from both parents, or something else that I've missed? Thank you.
by drinian