summary
Introduced
02/06/2026
02/06/2026
In Committee
02/06/2026
02/06/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2025-2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill imposes an estate tax on transfers of property that take place upon an individual’s death. The bill applies to deaths occurring after October 31, 2026. Under the bill, the tax is imposed on the value of the decedent’s Wisconsin taxable estate. The Wisconsin taxable estate is the decedent’s federal gross estate, excluding any property with a situs outside Wisconsin, decreased by certain federal estate tax deductions, regardless of whether they were claimed for federal purposes, and excluding the value of qualifying farmland. Under the bill, qualifying farmland is real property that is primarily used for farming, is valued at no more than $15,000,000 at the time of the decedent’s death, and is inherited by qualifying family members who continuously hold it for at least 10 years. The bill imposes the estate tax using a graduated rate structure that is based on the highest marginal tax rate for the federal estate tax, which is 40 percent, and the amount of the federal estate tax exclusion, which is $15,000,000, adjusted annually for inflation, plus any unused federal exclusion amount of a predeceased spouse. Specifically, the bill taxes the Wisconsin taxable estate as follows: 1. The amount of the estate that is valued at less than one-third of the federal exclusion amount is not taxed. 2. The amount of the estate that is valued at one-third to two-thirds of the federal exclusion amount is taxed at the rate of 6.67 percent, which is one-sixth of the highest federal marginal rate. 3. The amount of the estate that is valued at two-thirds to the full amount of the federal exclusion amount is taxed at the rate of 13.33 percent, which is one-third of the highest federal marginal rate. 4. The amount of the estate that is valued at the federal exclusion amount or greater is taxed at the rate of 20 percent, which is one-half of the highest federal marginal rate. The bill provides that if the federal exclusion amount is reduced or repealed, the estate tax will be imposed using the federal exclusion amount that applied in the taxable year immediately prior to the reduction or repeal. The bill generally requires that an estate tax return be filed within nine months of the decedent’s death and full payment of the tax be made at that time as well. If qualifying farmland excluded from the estate at the time of the decedent’s death is sold or developed within the 10-year period during which qualifying family members must hold the farmland, the estate tax is imposed on the full value at the time of sale or development and is due within six months. Under the bill, the failure to file a estate tax return is subject to a penalty equal to the lesser of 5 percent of the tax due or $500 and, if tax is not paid when due, interest is charged at 12 percent. Prior law imposed an estate tax that was structured to take advantage of a federal estate tax credit for state death taxes, which had the effect of reducing the amount of estate tax paid to the federal government by the amount paid to the state. The federal government sunsetted and eventually repealed the credit. Wisconsin’s estate tax is sunsetted for deaths occurring after December 31, 2012, unless federal law is modified to provide a federal estate tax credit for state death taxes. The bill eliminates the prior estate tax provisions, including the provision that would have revived the tax. While the bill eliminates the prior estate tax, the bill generally contains tax administration provisions similar to those that applied under prior law, including provisions relating to the Department of Revenue’s collection authority, confidentiality protections for the estate tax return and related information, the jurisdiction of circuit courts to handle disputes, and the ability of DOR to use an arbitration panel to handle residency disputes among Wisconsin and other states. For further information see the state fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
AI Summary
This bill imposes a new estate tax on property transfers occurring after October 31, 2026, calculated on the value of a decedent's Wisconsin taxable estate, which is their federal gross estate minus property outside Wisconsin, certain federal estate tax deductions, and the value of qualifying farmland. Qualifying farmland, defined as real property primarily used for farming valued at no more than $15,000,000 and held by family members for at least 10 years, is excluded from this tax. The tax rates are graduated, based on a portion of the federal estate tax exclusion amount (which is $15,000,000, adjusted annually for inflation, plus any unused exclusion from a predeceased spouse), with the highest rate being 20 percent, which is half of the current highest federal estate tax rate of 40 percent. The bill requires estate tax returns and full payment within nine months of death, with penalties and 12 percent annual interest for late filings or payments, and imposes the tax on the full value of qualifying farmland if it's sold or developed for non-farm use within the 10-year holding period, due within six months of such an event. This new tax replaces prior estate tax provisions that were designed to utilize a federal tax credit that has since been repealed, and it includes administrative provisions for tax collection, confidentiality, and dispute resolution similar to those under prior law.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (9)
Ryan Clancy (D)*,
Francesca Hong (D)*,
Darrin Madison (D)*,
Supreme Moore Omokunde (D)*,
Christian Phelps (D)*,
Amaad Rivera-Wagner (D)*,
Christine Sinicki (D)*,
Angelito Tenorio (D)*,
Chris Larson (D),
Last Action
Read first time and referred to Committee on Ways and Means (on 02/06/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/proposals/reg/asm/bill/ab1029 |
| BillText | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/document/proposaltext/2025/REG/AB1029.pdf |
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