Estate planning rules vary dramatically from state to state. Probate costs, estate taxes, inheritance taxes, and available planning tools all depend on where you (or your parents) live. Use these comparison tables to see how your state stacks up — then visit your state’s full guide for the details.
Quick Reference: All 50 States + DC
This table shows the factors that matter most when comparing estate planning rules. Click your state name for the full guide.
| State | Estate Tax | Inheritance Tax | Community Property | TOD Deeds | Lady Bird Deeds | DAPT | Medicaid Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | No | No | No | No | No | Yes (2021) | Probate-only |
| Alaska | No | No | Opt-in | Yes | No | Yes (1997) | Expanded |
| Arizona | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Arkansas | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (2023) | Expanded |
| California | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Colorado | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Probate-only |
| Connecticut | Yes ($15M) | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (2020) | Expanded |
| DC | Yes (~$4.99M) | No | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Delaware | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (1997) | Expanded |
| Florida | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Expanded |
| Georgia | No | No | No | Yes (2026) | No | No | Probate-only |
| Hawaii | Yes ($5.49M) | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Expanded |
| Idaho | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | Expanded |
| Illinois | Yes ($4M) | No | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Indiana | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (2019) | Expanded |
| Iowa | No | Repealed (2026) | No | No | No | No | Expanded |
| Kansas | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Kentucky | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Expanded |
| Louisiana | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | Expanded |
| Maine | Yes (~$7M) | No | No | Yes | No | No | Probate-only |
| Maryland | Yes ($5M) | Yes | No | Yes (2026) | No | No | Expanded |
| Massachusetts | Yes ($2M) | No | No | No | No | No | Probate-only |
| Michigan | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Expanded |
| Minnesota | Yes (~$3M) | No | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Mississippi | No | No | No | Yes (2020) | No | Yes (2014) | Probate-only |
| Missouri | No | No | No | Yes (1989) | No | Yes | Probate-only* |
| Montana | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Nebraska | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Nevada | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes (1999) | Expanded |
| New Hampshire | No | No | No | Yes (2026) | No | Yes (2008) | Expanded |
| New Jersey | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Expanded |
| New Mexico | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Probate-only |
| New York | Yes (~$7.16M) | No | No | Yes (2026) | No | No | Expanded |
| North Carolina | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | Probate-only |
| North Dakota | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Probate-only |
| Ohio | No | No | No | Yes* | No | Yes (2013) | Expanded |
| Oklahoma | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (2026) | Probate-only |
| Oregon | Yes ($1M) | No | No | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Pennsylvania | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Expanded |
| Rhode Island | Yes ($1.84M) | No | No | No | No | Yes (1999) | Probate-only |
| South Carolina | No | No | No | No | No | No | Probate-only |
| South Dakota | No | No | Opt-in | Yes | No | Yes (2005) | Expanded |
| Tennessee | No | No | Opt-in | No | No | Yes (2007) | Expanded |
| Texas | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Expanded |
| Utah | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Expanded |
| Vermont | Yes ($5M) | No | No | No | Yes | No | Probate-only |
| Virginia | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (2012) | Expanded |
| Washington | Yes ($3.08M) | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| West Virginia | No | No | No | Yes (2023) | Yes | Yes | Probate-only |
| Wisconsin | No | No | Yes* | Yes | No | No | Expanded |
| Wyoming | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes (2007) | Expanded |
Notes: Ohio* uses a TOD designation affidavit rather than a traditional TOD deed. Wisconsin* adopted community property by legislation (Marital Property Act 1986). Missouri* is technically probate-only but the Jones decision (2009) allowed recovery through a beneficiary deed. Alaska, South Dakota, and Tennessee offer opt-in community property trusts for the double step-up in basis. Estate tax exemption amounts shown are approximate 2026 figures and may be inflation-adjusted.
State Estate Tax Comparison
Only 12 states and DC impose their own estate tax — separate from the federal $15 million exemption. If your parents live in one of these states, the state tax threshold is what matters for planning.
| State | Exemption (2026) | Top Rate | Portability | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oregon | $1M | 16% | No | Lowest threshold in America (unchanged since 2001) |
| Rhode Island | $1.84M | 16% | No | Second-lowest; indexed to inflation |
| Massachusetts | $2M | 16% | No | Cliff eliminated Oct 2023; $99,600 credit |
| Minnesota | ~$3M | 16% | No | Inflation-adjusted annually |
| Washington | $3.08M | 35% | No | Highest rate in the nation |
| Illinois | $4M | 16% | No | Cliff effect: ~28.6% marginal rate on first dollar over $4M |
| DC | ~$4.99M | 16% | No | Multi-jurisdictional with MD/VA |
| Maryland | $5M | 16% | Yes | Also has inheritance tax (only state with both) |
| Vermont | $5M | 16% | No | Flat rate; 2-year gift recapture rule |
| Hawaii | $5.49M | 20% | Yes | One of only two estate tax states with portability |
| Maine | ~$7M | 12% | No | Growing gap with federal $15M exemption |
| New York | ~$7.16M | 16% | No | Cliff: exceeding by 5% taxes entire estate |
| Connecticut | $15M | 12% | No | Aligned with federal; only state with own gift tax |
Planning note: In states without portability (all except Maryland and Hawaii), a credit shelter trust is essential for married couples to use both spouses’ exemptions. Without one, the first spouse’s exemption is wasted.
Inheritance Tax Comparison
Six states tax what beneficiaries receive, with rates depending on the relationship between the deceased and the heir. This is different from estate tax, which taxes the estate itself.
| State | Spouses | Children / Lineal | Siblings / Other Family | Unrelated | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iowa | Fully repealed January 1, 2025 | Was phased out 2021-2024 | |||
| Kentucky | Exempt | Exempt (Class A) | 4-16% (Class B) | 6-16% (Class C) | Dower/curtesy still active |
| Maryland | Exempt | Exempt | 10% | 10% | Also has estate tax; credit between the two |
| Nebraska | Exempt | 1% over $100K | 11% over $40K | 15% over $25K | Only state where county administers |
| New Jersey | Exempt | Exempt (Class A) | 11-16% (Class C/D) | 15-16% from $0 (Class D) | Class D has zero exemption |
| Pennsylvania | Exempt | 4.5% | 12% | 15% | Revocable trusts do NOT avoid PA inheritance tax |
Critical distinction: In most states, transferring assets to a revocable living trust avoids probate AND estate recovery. In Pennsylvania, revocable trusts avoid probate but the inheritance tax still applies. This is the most commonly misunderstood fact in PA estate planning.
Why State Comparison Matters
Property in Multiple States
If your parents own a home in one state and a vacation property in another, their estate could go through probate in both states (called “ancillary probate”). Knowing both states’ rules helps you understand the full exposure — and why a trust is often essential for multi-state property owners.
Relocating in Retirement
Many retirees move to a different state — and the estate planning rules in the new state may be very different. A trust created in Massachusetts (which has a $2 million estate tax exemption) may need to be reviewed if your parents move to Florida (which has no state estate tax but different homestead protections).
Beneficiaries in Different States
If your parents live in one state and you live in another, inheritance tax rules in certain states could affect what you receive. For example, Pennsylvania taxes inheritances even to direct descendants — something that could surprise a beneficiary who lives in a no-tax state.
Choosing Where to Establish a Trust
In some situations, families can choose which state’s law governs their trust. States like South Dakota, Nevada, and Delaware have trust-friendly laws that attract trusts from other states. An estate planning attorney can advise whether this makes sense for your family.
Probate Avoidance Tools by State
Not every probate avoidance tool is available in every state. This matters because in states with fewer tools, living trusts become more important — sometimes essential.
States Without TOD Deeds for Real Property
Transfer-on-death deeds let you pass real estate outside probate without a trust. These states don’t offer them, making trusts the primary real estate probate avoidance tool:
- Alabama — No TOD deeds, no Lady Bird deeds, no TBE. Trusts are essentially the only option.
- Idaho — No TOD deeds for real property despite being a UPC state.
- Iowa — Pending legislation (HF 125/HF 816) has repeatedly stalled.
- Kentucky — SB 34 pending for 2026.
- Louisiana — Civil law system uses successions instead.
- Massachusetts — No TOD deeds for real property; trusts essential for real estate.
- New Jersey — Legislation pending; TOD for vehicles only (since 2023).
- North Carolina — Has Lady Bird deeds as an alternative.
- Pennsylvania — No TOD deeds and no Lady Bird deeds.
- Rhode Island — S0141 pending.
- South Carolina — S.49 pending; H.4264 for Lady Bird deeds also pending.
- Tennessee — SB984 pending.
- Vermont — Has Lady Bird deeds as an alternative.
Lady Bird Deed States
Only about six states recognize enhanced life estate deeds (Lady Bird deeds), which transfer property at death while letting the owner retain full control during life — including the right to sell without the remainderman’s consent:
Community Property States
In community property states, most assets acquired during marriage belong equally to both spouses. The biggest estate planning advantage: a potential double step-up in basis at the first spouse’s death, which can save families tens of thousands in capital gains taxes.
| State | Type | CPWROS Available | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arizona | Full CP | Yes (1995, pioneer) | Quasi-CP at divorce but NOT at death (critical gap) |
| California | Full CP | Yes | Largest CP state; statutory probate fees drive trust adoption |
| Idaho | Full CP | Yes | Unique: income from separate property = community property |
| Louisiana | Full CP (civil law) | N/A | Civil law system; forced heirship; successions not probate |
| Nevada | Full CP | Yes | Strongest DAPT + community property combination |
| New Mexico | Full CP | Yes (hybrid) | Joint tenancy for married couples presumed CP |
| Texas | Full CP | Yes | Independent administration makes probate easier than most |
| Washington | Full CP | Yes | Community property agreements as probate avoidance tool |
| Wisconsin | By statute | Yes | Only state to adopt CP by legislation (Marital Property Act 1986) |
| Alaska | Opt-in | N/A | Non-residents can elect CP for specific assets (double step-up) |
| South Dakota | Opt-in | N/A | Special Spousal Property Trust for double step-up |
| Tennessee | Opt-in | N/A | Community Property Trust Act (opt-in for double step-up) |
Premier Trust Jurisdictions
Some states have deliberately modernized their trust laws to attract trust business from other states. Families with significant assets sometimes establish trusts in these states regardless of where they live.
| State | Dynasty Trust Duration | DAPT | Directed Trusts | No State Income Tax | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Dakota | Perpetual | Yes | Yes | Yes | #1 ranked; $815B+ in trust assets; strongest privacy |
| Nevada | 365 years | Strongest | Yes | Yes | Zero exception creditors on DAPT (Klabacka upheld) |
| Delaware | Perpetual (personal) | Yes | Premier | For non-residents | Court of Chancery (230+ years of trust law) |
| Wyoming | 1,000 years | Yes | Yes | Yes | Strongest privacy (anonymous LLCs + trust) |
| New Hampshire | Perpetual | Yes | Yes | Yes | $311B+ in trust assets; best in New England |
| Tennessee | 360 years | 18-month SOL | Yes | Yes | Shortest DAPT seasoning nationally |
| Alaska | Perpetual | Yes (1997) | Yes | Yes | DAPT pioneer; opt-in community property |
Medicaid Estate Recovery: Probate-Only vs. Expanded
After a Medicaid recipient dies, the state seeks to recover what it paid for their care. This is where the biggest planning difference lies. In probate-only states, assets outside probate (trusts, TOD deeds, joint accounts) are generally protected. In expanded recovery states, the state can reach beyond probate into trusts, TOD accounts, joint tenancy, and more.
Probate-Only Recovery (More Favorable)
Colorado, Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri*, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, West Virginia
In these states, a funded revocable trust, TOD deeds, and POD accounts generally shield assets from Medicaid recovery.
Expanded Recovery (More Aggressive)
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, DC, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming
In these states, Medicaid may recover from revocable trusts, joint accounts, TOD/POD assets, life estates, and more. Irrevocable trust planning becomes critical.
*Missouri is technically probate-only but the Jones case (2009) created a gray area around beneficiary deeds. The aggressiveness of expanded recovery varies significantly by state — see your state’s guide for specifics.
States with Dower or Curtesy Rights
Only three states still retain the ancient common-law right of dower (for surviving wives) or curtesy (for surviving husbands), which gives the surviving spouse a claim to a portion of the deceased spouse’s real property regardless of what the will says:
- Arkansas — Both spouses must sign every deed to real property during marriage
- Kentucky — 1/3 life estate or 1/2 fee simple depending on children
- Ohio — Dower is 1/3 life estate in all real property owned during marriage
Find Your State’s Full Guide
Every state guide covers trust types, probate process, tax rules, available tools, Medicaid recovery, powers of attorney, healthcare directives, recent legislation, and how to find a qualified estate planning attorney.
Where are you in this journey?
- My parents are getting older — just starting to think about this
- We need a plan now — ready to take action
- Settling an estate — dealing with a parent’s passing
Go deeper: Living Trusts Guide · How to Avoid Probate · Estate Tax Planning · Protecting Your Parents’ Legacy
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Last updated: February 2026. Data reflects state laws current through early 2026, including recent legislative changes. Estate tax exemption amounts may be inflation-adjusted; check your state’s guide for the most current figures. This page is educational information, not legal advice.
