Inheritance Tax

Inheritance Tax in Iowa: Complete Guide 2026

Updated 2026-03-10

Data Notice: Figures, rates, and statistics cited in this article are based on the most recent available data at time of writing and may reflect projections or prior-year figures. Always verify current numbers with official sources before making financial, medical, or educational decisions.

Inheritance Tax in Iowa: Complete Guide 2026

Tax information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a licensed estate planning attorney for your specific situation.

Iowa has been phasing out its inheritance tax under legislation signed in 2021. The phase-out schedule reduces rates by a set percentage each year, with the inheritance tax projected to be fully eliminated by 2025. For estates of decedents dying in 2025 and after, Iowa’s inheritance tax should no longer apply. However, understanding the legacy rules and the transition is important for estates still settling under prior years’ rules, and taxpayers should confirm the complete elimination has taken effect as projected.


Iowa Inheritance Tax Phase-Out Schedule

Year of DeathRate ReductionStatus
2021Base yearFull rates applied
2022~20% reductionReduced rates
2023~40% reductionReduced rates
2024~60% reductionReduced rates
2025 and afterFully eliminatedNo inheritance tax

Legacy Rate Structure (Pre-Phase-Out)

Before the phase-out, Iowa’s inheritance tax rates varied by the relationship between the decedent and the beneficiary:

Beneficiary CategoryRate Range (Pre-Phase-Out)
Surviving spouseExempt
Lineal descendants (children, grandchildren)Exempt
ParentsExempt
Siblings, sons-in-law, daughters-in-law~5.00% to ~10.00%
Other individuals (friends, distant relatives)~10.00% to ~15.00%
Firms, corporations, societies~10.00% to ~15.00%

The exemption amount for taxable beneficiary classes was approximately ~$25,000 per beneficiary.


What the Elimination Means for Iowans

The elimination of Iowa’s inheritance tax represents a significant change for estate planning in the state:

  • Estates of decedents dying in 2025 or later should owe no Iowa inheritance tax
  • Estates still open from prior years may still owe inheritance tax at the reduced rates applicable to the year of death
  • No replacement tax has been enacted — the inheritance tax is simply being eliminated without a substitute estate tax

Iowa joins the trend of states reducing or eliminating inheritance taxes. Maryland, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania still impose inheritance taxes.


Iowa Inheritance Tax vs. Estate Tax: Key Distinction

It is important to understand the difference:

FeatureInheritance TaxEstate Tax
Who paysThe beneficiary (heir)The estate
Based onRelationship to the decedent + amount receivedTotal estate value
Iowa statusBeing eliminatedIowa has no estate tax

Iowa has never imposed a state estate tax (separate from the inheritance tax). The inheritance tax was the only state-level transfer tax, and its elimination means Iowa will have no state death tax of any kind for deaths occurring in 2025 and after.


Comparison to Other Inheritance Tax States

StateInheritance Tax StatusRate RangeLineal Heirs
IowaEliminated (2025+)N/AWere exempt
KentuckyActive~4.00% to ~16.00%Exempt
NebraskaActive~1.00% to ~18.00%~1.00% (above ~$100,000)
PennsylvaniaActive~4.50% to ~15.00%~4.50%
MarylandActive~10.00% flat (non-lineal)Exempt
New JerseyActive~11.00% to ~16.00%Exempt

Iowa’s elimination makes it one of the most tax-friendly states for wealth transfers in the Midwest. All neighboring states (Minnesota has an estate tax; Nebraska has an inheritance tax) still impose some form of transfer tax.


Implications for Estate Planning

For Iowa Residents

With the inheritance tax eliminated, Iowa residents no longer need to structure bequests around the tax. Previously, leaving assets to siblings, friends, or non-lineal heirs triggered tax of ~5.00% to ~15.00%. Now, these transfers are tax-free at the state level.

However, Iowa residents should still plan for:

  • Federal estate tax (if the estate exceeds the federal exemption)
  • Iowa income tax on inherited retirement accounts (distributions from inherited IRAs are still subject to income tax)
  • Property tax on inherited real estate in Iowa

For Non-Residents with Iowa Property

Non-residents who own Iowa real estate or tangible personal property in Iowa were previously subject to Iowa inheritance tax on that property. With the elimination, non-residents no longer face this concern for deaths in 2025 and after.


Tips for Iowa Residents

  1. Confirm the elimination applies to your situation. If the decedent died before 2025, the inheritance tax at reduced rates may still apply. Verify the applicable year’s rules with the Iowa Department of Revenue.

  2. Review and simplify existing estate plans. Estate plans created to minimize Iowa inheritance tax may include provisions that are no longer necessary. An attorney can streamline documents.

  3. Focus on federal estate tax planning. With the potential TCJA sunset reducing the federal exemption to approximately ~$7.00 million, federal planning may now be the primary concern for wealthier Iowa families.

  4. Plan for inherited retirement accounts. Iowa still taxes distributions from inherited retirement accounts as income. Roth conversions and strategic distribution planning remain important.

  5. Consider the impact on non-lineal bequests. The elimination of the inheritance tax makes it significantly more cost-effective to leave assets to friends, siblings, nieces, nephews, and other non-lineal beneficiaries.

  6. Stay informed on legislative changes. While the phase-out is set in law, future legislatures could potentially reinstate an inheritance or estate tax. Monitor developments.


Key Takeaways

  • Iowa’s inheritance tax has been phased out and should be fully eliminated for decedents dying in 2025 and after
  • The phase-out reduces rates annually, so estates from prior years may still owe tax at reduced rates
  • Iowa has never had a separate estate tax, so the elimination means no state death tax at all
  • The elimination is particularly beneficial for bequests to siblings, friends, and non-lineal heirs, which previously faced rates of ~5.00% to ~15.00%
  • Iowa residents should refocus estate planning on the federal estate tax and income tax planning for inherited retirement accounts
  • Estate plans created to minimize Iowa inheritance tax should be reviewed and potentially simplified

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