Receiving an inheritance is one of the most financially consequential events in a person's life. It arrives during grief, often with little warning, and comes packaged with legal processes, tax questions, financial decisions, and family dynamics — all at once. I've guided beneficiaries through this transition hundreds of times. The biggest mistakes happen in the first 90 days: either from rushing to make irreversible decisions or from not understanding what the money actually is, what taxes apply, and what rights you have.
This guide is for New York beneficiaries who've received — or expect to receive — an inheritance. Whether you're inheriting through probate, receiving a life insurance payout, or being distributed assets from a trust, the guidance here will help you navigate the process intelligently and protect what you receive.
First: Take a Breath. Don't Rush.
This sounds simple. It's not, because you're grieving. But the single most important first step is to avoid making large financial decisions immediately. A significant inheritance sitting in a bank account for 90 days loses almost nothing while you gather information and think clearly. A significant inheritance invested poorly, given away impulsively, or spent in the first few months can't be recovered.
The exception: tax elections. Some inheritance-related tax decisions have hard deadlines. An inherited IRA requires decisions within 9 months to a year. Real estate held in an estate has timing implications for the stepped-up basis. Know the deadlines. Don't rush on everything else.
How New York Probate Works for Beneficiaries
If you're inheriting through a will, the estate must go through New York's Surrogate's Court probate process before you receive anything. Here's what happens:
- Petition for probate: The executor files the will with the Surrogate's Court in the county where the deceased lived. They petition for letters testamentary, which authorize them to act on behalf of the estate.
- Notice to distributees: All statutory heirs (people who would inherit under intestacy even if the will gives them nothing) must receive notice. This includes you as a beneficiary.
- Asset inventory and creditor period: The executor collects estate assets, notifies creditors, and pays valid debts, taxes, and expenses.
- Tax filings: Federal and New York estate tax returns must be filed if applicable. New York estate tax is due within 9 months of death.
- Distribution: After debts, taxes, and executor fees are paid, the remaining assets are distributed to beneficiaries.
This process typically takes 9 to 18 months in New York City, sometimes longer for contested or complex estates. You cannot force the executor to distribute before the process is complete — though you have rights to information and to an accounting.
Your Rights as a Beneficiary
New York law gives beneficiaries specific rights during probate. You have the right to:
- Receive notice of the probate proceeding
- Inspect the will
- Receive an inventory of estate assets upon request
- Request a formal accounting from the executor
- Object to the executor's accounting if you believe it's inaccurate or improper
- Petition the Surrogate's Court for removal of an executor who is breaching their fiduciary duties
If you believe an executor is mismanaging the estate, paying themselves excessive fees, or improperly delaying distributions, you don't have to wait silently. Consult an attorney. You have real legal remedies. Read more in our guide on executor duties and responsibilities in New York.
Taxes on Inheritances in New York
Let's be clear about what taxes do and don't apply to beneficiaries in New York.
New York Has No Inheritance Tax
Good news first: New York does not have an inheritance tax. An inheritance tax is paid by the beneficiary based on what they receive. New York repealed its inheritance tax decades ago. You do not owe New York tax simply because you received an inheritance.
New York Estate Tax (Paid by the Estate, Not You)
New York does have an estate tax — but it's paid by the estate, not by individual beneficiaries. The estate tax reduces the total assets available for distribution. For 2026, New York's estate tax exemption is approximately $7.16 million. Estates below that threshold owe no New York estate tax. Estates above it are subject to rates starting at 3.06% and reaching 16% — and the "cliff" provision can make the effective rate even higher for estates just above the threshold.
As a beneficiary, you don't pay this tax. The executor pays it from estate funds before distribution. But it reduces what you receive. For more detail, see our New York estate tax guide.
Federal Estate Tax
Similarly, federal estate tax is paid by the estate — not by beneficiaries. The federal exemption in 2026 is $13.99 million per person ($27.98 million for married couples with proper planning). Only very large estates trigger federal estate tax.
Income Tax on Inherited Assets
You generally don't pay income tax on cash inheritances. But you will pay income tax on income generated by inherited assets after you receive them. Several specific situations create income tax complexity:
- Inherited IRAs and retirement accounts: Withdrawals from an inherited traditional IRA are taxable as ordinary income. Under the SECURE Act's 10-year rule, most non-spouse beneficiaries must empty the account within 10 years. That forced income can be substantial. A $500,000 inherited IRA distributed over 10 years means $50,000 per year of taxable income — more if you take it unevenly. Planning the distribution schedule to minimize annual income tax is worth significant attention.
- Roth IRA inheritances: Distributions from an inherited Roth IRA are generally tax-free, as long as the account was held for at least five years. The 10-year rule still applies to mandatory liquidation, but without the income tax hit.
- Inherited capital assets (stocks, real estate): The "stepped-up basis" rule is one of the most valuable provisions in the tax code for heirs. When you inherit a capital asset, your cost basis "steps up" to the fair market value on the date of death. If your parent bought stock for $10,000 that was worth $200,000 when they died, your basis is $200,000. You pay capital gains tax only on appreciation after that date — not on the $190,000 gain that occurred during your parent's lifetime.
Stepped-Up Basis Example: Your father bought a Queens rental property in 1985 for $120,000. At his death in 2026, it's worth $1.1 million. You inherit it. Your basis is $1.1 million. If you sell it immediately, you owe no capital gains tax. If you hold it and sell in 2030 for $1.3 million, you owe capital gains only on the $200,000 increase after your father's death. The $980,000 gain during his lifetime is never taxed.
Inherited IRAs: The 10-Year Rule and What It Means for You
If you've inherited an IRA or 401(k) from someone who died after December 31, 2019, the SECURE Act almost certainly applies to you. Here's what you need to know:
Unless you're an "eligible designated beneficiary" (a surviving spouse, minor child, disabled person, chronically ill person, or someone not more than 10 years younger than the deceased), you must withdraw the entire inherited IRA balance within 10 years of the original owner's death.
There are no required annual withdrawals during those 10 years — you can take distributions whenever you want within the window. But by December 31 of the 10th year following the year of death, the account must be empty. Distributions are taxable as ordinary income.
Strategic timing of distributions across the 10-year period can significantly reduce your tax liability. If you expect your income to be lower in certain years (sabbatical, career transition, early retirement), concentrate distributions then. Don't default to equal annual withdrawals without running the numbers first.
Protecting an Inherited Inheritance from Divorce and Creditors
Under New York law, an inheritance is generally separate property — not marital property subject to equitable distribution in a divorce. But "generally" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Inherited assets can lose their separate property protection through "commingling" — mixing inherited money with marital funds in a joint account, using inherited assets to pay for marital expenses, or failing to maintain clear documentation of the source of the funds.
To protect an inheritance in the event of divorce:
- Keep inherited assets in a separate account in your name alone
- Don't deposit inherited funds into a joint account
- Don't use inherited assets to pay joint expenses without careful documentation
- Maintain records of the inheritance — estate distribution documents, account statements from the date of receipt
- Consult an attorney if you're concerned about marital property issues
For creditor protection, the picture is more complex. Inherited IRAs do not receive the same bankruptcy protection as your own retirement accounts — the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Clark v. Rameker (2014) that inherited IRAs are not "retirement funds" for purposes of the bankruptcy exemption. If you're carrying significant debt or facing financial difficulty when you receive an inheritance, speak with an attorney before depositing anything.
Should You Contest the Will?
If you believe the will doesn't reflect the true wishes of the deceased — due to undue influence, lack of testamentary capacity, fraud, or improper execution — you have the right to contest it in Surrogate's Court. New York imposes strict time limits: you must file an objection before the decree admitting the will to probate is entered, or within the time limits set in the Surrogate's Court notice.
Will contests are difficult to win. The burden of proof is on the person challenging the will. But when the evidence is strong — a sudden change in the will favoring a caregiver, signs of cognitive decline, a will executed without proper witnesses — it may be worth pursuing. Read our full guide on contesting a will in New York if you're considering this path.
Inheriting Real Estate in New York
Real estate is often the most valuable and most complicated inherited asset. A few key points:
- Stepped-up basis: As discussed above, you get a new basis at the fair market value on the date of death. If you sell quickly, you may owe little or no capital gains tax.
- Co-inheritance with siblings: If you inherit property jointly with siblings, all co-owners must agree on what to do with it. If you can't agree, any co-owner can petition for a partition action — a court proceeding that can force a sale. This is an expensive, acrimonious outcome. Try to reach agreement before it gets there.
- Rental income: If you inherit a rental property, rental income is immediately taxable to you as ordinary income from the date you take ownership.
- New York transfer taxes: There's no transfer tax on inherited real estate — you receive it without tax just for inheriting it. If you sell, standard capital gains rules and potentially the New York real property transfer tax apply to the gain above your stepped-up basis.
For a comprehensive look at property inheritance in the context of estate planning, see our guide on estate planning for real estate owners in New York.
Now: Update Your Own Estate Plan
Here's what most beneficiaries miss: receiving an inheritance changes your own estate. If you've received $500,000 that you didn't have before, your estate plan — if you have one — may no longer reflect your current situation. If you don't have an estate plan, now is exactly the right time to build one.
A significant inheritance may push your estate toward New York's tax threshold. It may change who you want to benefit and how. It may mean a revocable trust is now worth the cost. At minimum, review your beneficiary designations and make sure your will reflects your new financial reality. Learn what a complete New York estate plan includes — and call us to build yours.