Maryland Estate & Inheritance Tax Calculator Maryland Estate & Inheritance Tax Calculator

Maryland Estate & Inheritance Tax Calculator

Maryland Estate Tax — Calculator

Last updated: 25 Oct 2025 • Author: Alexander Foelsche CPA (US), WP (DE), RE (CH)

Maryland Estate Tax — Calculator

This quick calculator estimates Maryland’s Estate Tax using the state’s State Death Tax Credit framework, applies an inheritance-tax credit, and (for nonresidents) prorates via a Schedule-A style apportionment. Educational tool only—actual returns involve interrelated computations, certifications, and documentation with the Comptroller of Maryland.

Important. Maryland has a fixed $5,000,000 state exclusion and no state portability. In the calculator below, leave “DSUE” at 0 in typical Maryland cases. The input exists to model rare scenarios or “what-if” planning where a court order or future rule would allow an additional exclusion.

Maryland Estate Tax Calculator

Instant estimate using the MD credit table, inheritance-tax offset, and Schedule-A style apportionment for nonresidents. Educational only — actual returns include interrelated computations and certifications.

Advanced Maryland inputs (optional)

Results (educational estimate)

Estimated MD Line (taxable base before exclusion)
ATE used (Line 5 − $60,000)
Tentative MD estate tax (before inheritance-tax credit & apportionment)
Apportionment factor
Less: inheritance-tax credit
Estimated Maryland estate tax due

How to use the calculator

1) Enter the worldwide base
Use federal Form 706 schedules as scaffolding: gross estate, then subtract debts/administration, spousal and charitable bequests. Add adjusted taxable gifts to mirror Maryland’s credit mechanics.
2) Leave DSUE at 0
Maryland does not offer state portability. Keep DSUE = 0 unless you’re modeling a hypothetical or a court-recognized additional exclusion.
3) Nonresidents
Flip “Nonresident” to Yes and enter Maryland-situs real & tangible assets. The calculator multiplies the tentative tax by (MD-situs ÷ Worldwide).
4) Inheritance tax credit
Enter any inheritance tax expected to be paid by the estate. It offsets Maryland estate tax dollar-for-dollar, up to the tentative amount (interest timing matters).
5) QTIP adjustments
Model a Maryland-only QTIP elected in the current estate (reduces base) and any prior Maryland QTIP property included at the survivor’s death (adds back).

Tips & limitations

  • This is a teaching estimator. Use the Comptroller’s current return packet and instructions for the date of death; attach federal schedules or pro-forma equivalents if no 706 is filed.
  • No Maryland portability. Capture the state exclusion with a credit-shelter trust or use a Maryland-only QTIP to defer—compare outcomes.
  • Nonresident apportionment: Keep deeds, titles, appraisals, and location evidence for Maryland-situs assets; document allocation of general expenses if prorated.
  • Inheritance tax: Separate from the estate tax; payments can offset the estate tax but affect beneficiary economics—coordinate with the Register of Wills.
  • Extensions to file do not extend time to pay. Consider a tentative payment by month 9 to limit interest.

Not legal or tax advice. Results vary with facts (probate approvals, valuations, elections, timing). Use current law and Comptroller guidance.

Related pages: Forms & Deadlines · Nonresident Guide · Planning · Cases