When Bitcoin passes to your heirs at death, the IRS resets the cost basis to the current market price — permanently eliminating every dollar of capital gains tax accumulated during your lifetime. On a position bought at $5,000 and worth $71,000 today, that's a $66,000 gain per coin that simply disappears. Here's how to maximize it.
There is a provision in the US tax code — IRC §1014 — that Bitcoin long-term holders should treat as sacred. It is the reason why the single best tax strategy for many Bitcoin-wealthy families is simply to hold their Bitcoin until death rather than selling during their lifetime.
The rule: when you die holding appreciated assets, your heirs inherit those assets with a "stepped-up" cost basis equal to the fair market value on the date of your death. Every dollar of appreciation that occurred during your lifetime is permanently erased from the tax ledger. Your heirs can sell immediately at the inherited value and owe zero capital gains tax on the entire history of appreciation.
For Bitcoin holders who bought at $5,000, $10,000, or $20,000 per coin, this rule is worth potentially millions of dollars — per coin — in tax savings. Yet most Bitcoin holders don't fully understand it, and many make costly estate planning decisions that eliminate it.
Property acquired from a decedent receives a basis equal to the fair market value of the property at the date of the decedent's death. This applies to Bitcoin held in the decedent's gross estate — directly held, in a revocable trust, or in certain other structures where the decedent retained enough interest for estate inclusion.
Tax saved by holding to death rather than selling during life: $157,080 on 10 BTC. On a 100 BTC position bought at similar prices, the savings approach $1.57 million — from a single tax rule.
If Bitcoin appreciates further from its current ~$71,000 price — say, to $200,000 — the math becomes even more dramatic. A 10 BTC position bought at $5,000 and worth $2,000,000 at death produces a stepped-up basis of $2,000,000. The heirs owe zero capital gains tax on $1,950,000 in lifetime appreciation. The tax savings at 23.8% would be $464,100 on that position alone.
The stepped-up basis applies to assets that are:
Bitcoin held in your own name, in a revocable living trust, or in a joint tenancy with right of survivorship qualifies. Bitcoin included in your estate and passing to your spouse (under the marital deduction) also receives a step-up in the surviving spouse's hands — though the estate tax is deferred, not eliminated, on the marital deduction portion.
For Bitcoin, "fair market value at date of death" is determined by the price at which Bitcoin would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller on the date of death. The IRS has accepted exchange-based closing prices (typically CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index or similar reference rates) as the appropriate valuation benchmark. The executor must document the specific price used and attach it to the estate tax return (Form 706).
For estates that don't owe estate tax (below the exemption), the executor still needs to establish and document the stepped-up basis for each Bitcoin position inherited — because the heirs will need that basis when they eventually sell.
This is where many Bitcoin estate plans go wrong. Several common planning strategies — all of which are legitimate for estate tax purposes — eliminate the stepped-up basis:
Bitcoin contributed to an irrevocable trust during your lifetime — a SLAT, dynasty trust, IDGT, or irrevocable gift trust — is removed from your gross estate. That's the whole point. But because it's not in your estate at death, it does NOT receive a stepped-up basis. The trust retains the original carryover basis from when the Bitcoin was contributed. If the trust later sells Bitcoin appreciated from $10,000 to $200,000, the full $190,000 gain is taxable to the trust or its beneficiaries.
If you give Bitcoin directly to your children during your lifetime, you transfer your original cost basis along with the gift. A child who receives 1 BTC as a gift when it was worth $70,000 but you paid $5,000 inherits your $5,000 basis. When they sell, they owe capital gains tax on the full $65,000 appreciation. No step-up for lifetime gifts.
In a GRAT, the appreciation above the hurdle rate passes to the remainder beneficiaries — but it passes at the trust's carryover basis, not at a stepped-up basis. The GRAT's tax efficiency comes from removing the appreciation from the estate, not from the step-up. Heirs who receive Bitcoin from a GRAT remainder inherit the trust's original basis in the Bitcoin.
Bitcoin you hold directly, in a revocable trust, or in any structure where it remains in your gross estate at death gets the full step-up. This is the "do nothing and die" strategy — strategically holding low-basis Bitcoin to maximize the step-up benefit, particularly when the estate is below the estate tax exemption threshold.
Here is the fundamental trade-off that every Bitcoin estate plan must navigate:
The optimal strategy depends on: the size of your estate relative to the exemption, the amount of unrealized gain in your Bitcoin position, and your expected holding period.
Consider: should you put $3M in Bitcoin (with $2.5M in unrealized gains) into an irrevocable trust to save estate tax, if doing so costs you the stepped-up basis?
In this case, removing the Bitcoin from the estate saves more in estate tax ($1.2M) than it costs in lost step-up ($595K). The trust wins. But if the estate is below the exemption, there is no estate tax to save — and removing the Bitcoin from the estate gives up $595K in capital gains savings for zero estate tax benefit. Hold the Bitcoin and let the step-up do its work.
Not all Bitcoin positions are equal for planning purposes. A well-designed estate plan segments Bitcoin by basis:
Some grantor trusts — particularly IDGTs — include a "swap power" that allows the grantor to substitute assets of equivalent value into or out of the trust. Before death, a grantor holding low-basis Bitcoin personally could swap it into an IDGT in exchange for higher-basis assets of equal value. The high-basis assets go into the trust (less step-up needed). The low-basis Bitcoin comes back into the grantor's personal estate (qualifies for step-up at death). This technique requires careful execution and valuation documentation but can effectively route the step-up benefit to the Bitcoin with the most embedded gain.
Married couples can use the unlimited marital deduction to defer estate tax on Bitcoin passing to a surviving spouse — and the surviving spouse receives a stepped-up basis on all inherited Bitcoin. This defers but doesn't eliminate estate tax (the second estate pays when the surviving spouse dies). However, it gives the surviving spouse the option to sell Bitcoin after inheriting it at the stepped-up basis, potentially harvesting the tax-free appreciation window before the second estate closes.
If Bitcoin declines significantly in value within 6 months of the decedent's death, the executor can elect an "alternate valuation date" (6 months post-death) for estate tax purposes — potentially reducing the estate tax bill if Bitcoin has fallen. However, using the alternate valuation date also changes the stepped-up basis to the lower value. This creates a trade-off: lower estate tax vs. lower stepped-up basis for heirs. Run the numbers before electing the alternate date.
Bitcoin bought at $90,000+ that is currently worth less (~$71,000) has an embedded loss. If you die holding this Bitcoin, your heirs inherit it at $71,000 — a step-down that eliminates the potential loss deduction. For positions currently below cost basis, consider selling before death to realize the tax loss on your own return. The heirs then inherit cash (or a reinvested position at a fresh basis) rather than inheriting the step-down problem.
Unlike stocks, Bitcoin is not subject to wash sale rules under current law. You can sell Bitcoin at a loss to harvest the deduction, then immediately repurchase the same amount at the same price. The loss is recognized for tax purposes, and your new position has a higher cost basis. This is a meaningful planning advantage relative to equity portfolios.
Given the stepped-up basis rules and the current market (Bitcoin at ~$71K, down 44% from ATH), here are the specific actions to review:
| Your Situation | Step-Up Strategy | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Estate below $15M individual exemption; Bitcoin bought pre-2021 | Hold for step-up. No estate tax exposure. Capital gains savings are enormous. Do NOT put this Bitcoin in an irrevocable trust. | Act Now |
| Estate above $15M; Bitcoin has large embedded gain | Model the trade-off: estate tax saved vs. step-up lost. Often transfers still win, but not always. | Model First |
| Bitcoin currently below your cost basis (unrealized loss) | Sell to harvest loss. Repurchase immediately (no wash sale). Higher basis position is better for heirs. | Act Now |
| Bitcoin in an existing irrevocable trust with large embedded gain | Consider swap power if available. Otherwise, trust must plan for capital gains on eventual sale. | Review Trust |
| No estate plan; Bitcoin held in exchange or cold wallet | Step-up benefit is at risk if there's no documented basis + inheritance plan. Set up revocable trust + document basis. | Urgent |
The stepped-up basis is only useful if your executor and heirs can prove it. As of 2026, Form 1099-DA creates a formal basis documentation framework for exchange-held Bitcoin — but self-custody holders must maintain their own records. Read our complete guide: Form 1099-DA: What Bitcoin Families Must Do Now to Protect Their Estate
The stepped-up basis is the most powerful single tax benefit in Bitcoin estate planning — and it's easy to accidentally eliminate with the wrong trust structure. Join the waitlist to ensure your plan maximizes this benefit at every level.
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