New Zealand abolished its estate duty (inheritance tax) in 1992. Today, there is no inheritance tax in NZ — heirs receive assets from an estate without paying tax on the inheritance itself. However, there are still tax obligations that arise when someone dies, and certain assets may trigger tax when transferred or sold.
No — New Zealand has no inheritance tax or estate duty. When you inherit money, shares, or property from a deceased person, you do not pay tax on the inheritance. However: the estate must file a final income tax return for the deceased; income earned by the estate during administration is taxable; and if an inherited property is sold within the bright-line period (10 years for most residential property), capital gains tax-like rules (the bright-line test) may apply — but this depends on the circumstances.
No Inheritance Tax in NZ
New Zealand abolished estate duty on 17 December 1992. Since then:
- Heirs pay no tax on assets received from a deceased estate
- There is no gift duty either (abolished in 2011)
- NZ has no capital gains tax, so inherited assets are generally not taxed when transferred
This makes NZ unusual — many comparable countries (Australia’s states historically, the UK, the US) have or have had inheritance taxes.
What Tax Obligations Do Arise When Someone Dies?
While inheritance is not taxed, the estate administration process does involve tax:
1. Final Income Tax Return for the Deceased
The executor or administrator of the estate must file an income tax return (IR3) for the deceased person covering:
- Income from 1 April of the year of death to the date of death
- Any income the deceased earned but had not yet declared (rental income, business income, investment income)
The estate administrator is responsible for this filing. IRD must be notified of the person’s death — contact IRD with a copy of the death certificate.
2. Tax on Estate Income During Administration
While the estate is being administered (from death until assets are distributed), any income earned by the estate — rental income, interest, dividends — is taxable:
- The estate is treated as a separate taxpayer
- An estate income tax return (IR6) is filed by the executor
- Income is taxed at the trustee rate of 39% (or distributed to beneficiaries, who declare it at their own rates)
3. GST Obligations
If the deceased operated a GST-registered business, final GST returns must be filed and the GST registration cancelled.
The Bright-Line Test and Inherited Property
If you inherit residential property and sell it, the bright-line test may apply depending on when the property was acquired and sold:
| Scenario | Bright-line applies? |
|---|---|
| Property acquired by the deceased before 28 March 2018 | No bright-line on sale |
| Property acquired after 28 March 2018, sold within the bright-line period | May apply — but rules for inherited property are complex |
| Property that was the deceased’s main home | Main home exemption may apply |
Key rule for inherited property: When you inherit property, IRD generally treats your ownership as starting from when you received it (not when the deceased originally purchased it). If you sell within 10 years of inheriting (for property acquired by the estate after 27 March 2021), the bright-line test may apply.
However, if the property is the main home of a beneficiary, the main home exemption removes the bright-line tax. Seek legal/tax advice for inherited property situations.
Inherited KiwiSaver
When a KiwiSaver member dies, their balance is paid to their estate (or a nominated beneficiary where applicable):
- The KiwiSaver balance is paid out without tax (the PIE taxation has already been applied within the fund)
- It forms part of the estate and is distributed according to the will or intestacy rules
- No inheritance tax or income tax on the KiwiSaver payout
Inheriting Overseas Assets
If you inherit assets from overseas (a foreign bank account, overseas shares, or property):
- No NZ inheritance tax applies
- You may owe tax in the overseas country where the asset is located — each country has different estate/inheritance tax rules (the US and UK both have inheritance/estate taxes above certain thresholds)
- Seek advice from a tax specialist familiar with the relevant country’s rules
Frequently Asked Questions
I inherited $200,000 from my parents’ estate. Do I pay tax on it?
No — you pay no income tax, inheritance tax, or any other NZ tax on the inheritance itself. The money is yours free of NZ tax.
My parents left me their rental property. If I sell it, do I pay tax?
It depends. If you sell within the bright-line period (measured from when you received the property), the bright-line test may apply. If the property becomes your main home, the main home exemption usually applies. Get tax advice before selling inherited property.
Is there any proposal to reintroduce inheritance tax in NZ?
Inheritance tax is periodically discussed in NZ political debates — particularly around intergenerational wealth transfer. As of 2026, there is no legislation to reintroduce it. Monitor Budget announcements and the Tax Working Group for any changes.
The estate has overseas bank accounts and shares. How are they dealt with?
The overseas country may impose estate or inheritance tax, and the estate may need to file returns in that country. The NZ executor should seek advice from an international tax specialist.