The holiday season is the ideal time to make a nice gesture to your descendants. To ensure that a well-ordered succession is accompanied by anticipation and preparation, there is nothing better than making a donation. They will prevent you from worrying about your spouse's material comfort and will limit the risks of disputes between your children. So don't hesitate!
Take advice from your notary in order to give without totally stripping yourself. It is a question of finding the right balance between optimizing the transmission of one's assets and pleasing one's loved ones. The variety of donations allows us to provide a tailor-made patrimonial answer for each situation, while taking advantage of an advantageous tax system. Make your choice!
Practical information - Spouses can give each other an inter-spousal gift (also called a last living gift). This involves two deeds (each one his or her own) received by the notary. The donation between spouses is unilaterally revocable; the other spouse is therefore not kept informed! On the other hand, when it is granted by a marriage contract, it is irrevocable.
Practicalities: Each partner can make a will for the benefit of the other. The will can be holographic (written in the hand of the testator, dated and signed) and deposited at the office to be registered in the central file of last wills or received by the notary in authentic form.
On the practical side: It is in the interest of the beneficiary of a manual gift to declare it to the tax authorities. This will allow him to "take date", with regard to the deadline of the tax allowances. Indeed, from a certain amount, the manual donation is taxable to the rights of donations. To register the donation, you will simply have to fill in a Cerfa form at the tax office or do it by notarial act. With this spontaneous declaration, you will avoid that the tax authorities ask you to justify yourself, during a tax audit for example.
Practical information: Donations are so-called "solemn" acts; they are only made by notarial act. Your notary will advise you to make a particular donation according to your assets. You should not strip yourself of all your assets! For example, reserving the usufruct on the donated real estate can be a good idea. You will then be able to receive the fruits of the property (the rents).
In order not to harm any of your children, a shared donation is a good formula. It has the double advantage of avoiding family conflicts when settling the estate and facilitating the allocation of assets. You respect the wishes of each person, by composing the different lots that will be attributed to your children. It should be noted that everyone must receive his or her share as provided for by law. If this is not the case, the aggrieved child can act through the action in reduction.
Practical side: Proceeding to an anticipated division of the goods, the gift-sharing is not reportable to the succession. This is where its interest lies because it will not be taken into account during the sharing operations at the donor's death. Moreover, during the civil liquidation of the estate, the value of the shared-gift will be taken into account on the day of the deed and not on the day of death (provided that all the heirs with right to inherit have been allotted).
It should also be noted that a shared gift can also be made to grandchildren, provided that the donor's own children agree in the deed not to be beneficiaries. This is called a transgenerational donation.
Take advantage of a tax advantage while it is still possible
When you are lucky enough to receive a donation, you may have to pay donation taxes, but maybe not... Donations benefit from an advantageous tax system due to the tax allowances. The tax rate will be applied only after deducting the allowance(s).
You make a donation to ... | The tax allowance will be ... |
Your father or your mother | 100 000 € |
Your spouse or your partner in a civil union | 80 724 € |
A child | 100 000 € |
A grandchild | 31 865 € |
One great-grandchild | 5 310 € |
A brother or sister | 15 932 € |
A nephew or a niece | 7 967 € |
A disabled person | 159 325 € |
Allowances and donations You make a donation to ... The tax allowance will be ... Your father or your mother 100 000 € Your spouse or your civil union partner 80 724 € A child 100 000 € A grandchild 31 865 € A great-grandchild 5 310 A great-grandchild 5 310 € A brother or sister 15 932 € A nephew or niece 7 967 € A disabled person 159 325 €
Special deduction for disabled persons
There is an allowance of €159,325 for disabled persons. It is cumulative, for example, with the deduction of €100,000 for direct descendants (e.g. parent and child). The person must be suffering from a physical or mental infirmity that prevents him or her from working under normal conditions or, for those under 18, from acquiring a normal education.
Special allowance for donations of money
There is a specific regime for family gifts of money: each parent can give €31,865 to each of his or her children free of tax (the donor must be under 80 years of age and the child must be of age to benefit from this allowance).
This deduction is added to the usual deduction of €100,000, so a father or mother can give a child up to €131,865 without paying tax every 15 years.
The deduction of 31 865 € also applies to gifts of money to a grandchild, a great-grandchild and, in the absence of descendants, to a nephew or niece or by representation of a grand-nephew or grand-niece.
A scale by bracket is applicable for the calculation of the transfer duties, it is according to the relationship between donor and donee.
Stéphanie Swiklinski
Dernière modification le 2021-12-15