Massachusetts Estate Tax Guide Massachusetts Estate Tax Guide

Massachusetts Estate Tax Guide

Massachusetts Estate Tax & Probate Guide

Last updated: 18 Oct 2025 • Author: Alexander Foelsche CPA (US), WP (DE), RE (CH)

Massachusetts Estate Tax & Probate — Complete Guide

What executors and families need to know about Massachusetts probate and estate tax: who files, what’s taxable, nonresident rules & apportionment, forms, deadlines & extensions, elections (MA-only QTIP), valuation and liens—plus a calculator, case notes, and a nonresident guide.

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Quick orientation: For deaths on or after 2023, Massachusetts applies a $2,000,000 exclusion and an anti-cliff credit that prevents tax from exceeding the amount above $2M. Estates file Form M-706, generally due in 9 months. Massachusetts allows a state-only QTIP election; there is no portability of DSUE.

Massachusetts Probate Basics

Courts & intestacy

Probate is handled by the Massachusetts Probate & Family Court (by county). If there is no will, distribution follows Massachusetts intestacy statutes. Ancillary probate is common when nonresidents own Massachusetts real property.

Typical probate steps

Open estate → appoint personal representative → notices → inventory & appraisals → pay debts/expenses/taxes → accountings → distribution & close.

Massachusetts Estate Tax — At a Glance

Who must file?
The personal representative files M-706 when the MA computation shows tax due or when MA-specific elections (e.g., state-only QTIP) are needed; nonresidents file if they own MA-situs real/tangible property.
Tax base
Massachusetts uses a federalized base (IRC as of 12/31/2000) to determine the Massachusetts taxable estate, then applies the $2M exclusion and the anti-cliff credit.
MA-only QTIP
Permitted on a timely M-706 even if no federal QTIP is made; property is then includible in the survivor’s Massachusetts estate per federal inclusion concepts.
Nonresidents
Tax applies only to Massachusetts-situs real property and tangible personal property. Compute as if resident and then apply an apportionment fraction limited to MA-situs assets.
Due date & extensions
Return due in 9 months. Extensions to file and to pay are separate; interest accrues on unpaid amounts.
Automatic lien
An estate tax lien attaches to MA real/tangible property at death. Clear title with a Certificate of Release/Discharge after filing or acceptable security.

Official Pages, Forms & Where to File/Pay

  • Massachusetts Department of Revenue — Form M-706 & Instructions (current year).
  • Statute: M.G.L. c. 65C (Estate Tax); regulations 830 CMR 65C.
  • Federal: IRS Form 706 & instructions (attach pages/schedules or pro-forma if no federal filing).

Massachusetts Situs vs. Non-Situs (for Nonresidents)

Asset typeMA treatmentNotes
Real property in MassachusettsIncludedHomes, condos, land, commercial property. Appraisals recommended.
Tangible personal property kept in MAIncludedBoats, vehicles, equipment, artwork physically in Massachusetts.
Intangibles (stock, bank/brokerage)Generally excludedFor nonresidents, excluded unless a Massachusetts business situs exists.
Entity interests (LLC/partnership)Generally excludedTreated as intangibles; avoid MA-centered management/records that imply business situs.

If you’re a nonresident with Massachusetts assets, see the Nonresident Guide for examples and a filing checklist.

Filing Mechanics, Deadlines & Payment

  • When to file: M-706 due within 9 months from date of death.
  • Extension to file: typically up to 6 months; submit by the original due date (attach IRS 4768 approval if used). Does not extend time to pay.
  • Extension to pay: separate request; interest accrues and security may be required.
  • Where to file & pay: File with the Massachusetts DOR; pay electronically where available or by check with the current voucher.
  • Installments: If federal IRC §6166 relief applies, align the Massachusetts portion (especially for MA-situs business assets).

Planning Ideas to Reduce Massachusetts Estate Tax

  • MA-only QTIP. Defer MA tax at the first death even if no federal QTIP is made; track inclusion for the survivor.
  • Credit shelter & charitable planning. Coordinate with the $2M exclusion and anti-cliff credit; attach robust support.
  • Nonresident situs. Limit MA-situs assets; avoid business-situs facts for intangibles.
  • Valuation & deductions. Use strong local appraisals; keep court orders/invoices to support deductions.
  • Liquidity & lien. Stage cash for the 9-month payment and prepare early for lien discharge if a sale/closing is imminent.

Tools & Subpages

Calculator

Estimate MA estate tax for residents and nonresidents; models the $2M exclusion, anti-cliff credit, and apportionment.

Open Calculator

Forms & Deadlines

All forms (M-706) with due dates, extensions, payments, lien discharge, and checklists.

Open Forms & Deadlines

Nonresident Guide

Who must file, what is MA-situs, apportionment mechanics, examples, and checklists.

Open Nonresident Guide

Case Notes

Authorities-first summaries on $2M exclusion/credit, MA-only QTIP, nonresident apportionment, deadlines, & liens.

Open Cases

Planning

Strategies to reduce exposure, allocate burden, and fund payments—checklists and workflows.

Open Planning

FAQs

Does Massachusetts have an estate or an inheritance tax?

Massachusetts has a state estate tax (paid by the estate). For 2023+ decedents, a $2M exclusion and anti-cliff credit apply.

When is Massachusetts Form M-706 due?

Nine months after the date of death. Extensions can give more time to file; time to pay requires a separate request and may accrue interest.

How are nonresidents taxed?

Only on MA-situs real and tangible property. Most nonresident intangibles are excluded unless Massachusetts business-situs facts exist. Liability is limited by apportionment.

What is a Massachusetts-only QTIP election?

An election on a timely M-706 to defer MA tax at the first death even if no federal QTIP is made; the property is later included in the survivor’s MA estate.

Need help filing or planning?

We assist with Massachusetts probate coordination, resident and nonresident filings, MA-only QTIP and charitable elections, valuation documentation, lien discharges, and liquidity planning.

Talk to an advisor → taxrep.us/contact