
Receiving an inheritance can be emotional and overwhelming. Alongside grief and family dynamics, you’re suddenly faced with financial decisions that can have long-term impacts — especially for accumulators and pre-retirees trying to balance growth, security and lifestyle goals.
Here’s the reassuring starting point: Australia does not have an inheritance (estate) tax. That said, an inheritance can still create tax consequences, mainly through:
General information only: This is not personal tax, legal or financial advice. Inherited assets can be complex (especially cost base, super death benefits, and estate administration). Get advice tailored to your situation before acting.
1.) Confirm what you’re inheriting and how it’s being paid
Common inheritance scenarios:
2.) Park funds safely while paperwork settles
If you receive cash, it’s fine to hold it in a secure account for a period while you:
Ask for (or collect):
Even though there’s no inheritance tax, you may later owe tax because:
Tax on receiving it: typically no (no inheritance tax).
Tax afterwards: interest earned on the cash is taxable.
Practical takeaway: With a cash inheritance, the tax question is usually not the inheritance itself — it’s what you do next with the money and what income it generates.
B. Inheriting Shares, ETFs, or Managed Funds
Shares and funds are often straightforward operationally, but tax outcomes hinge on CGT cost base.
The key concept: the inherited “cost base”
CGT isn’t about what the asset is worth when you inherit it — it’s about the cost base that applies under the tax rules. This can depend on things like when the deceased acquired the asset and other CGT factors.
If you later sell inherited shares/ETFs/funds, CGT is generally calculated using that inherited cost base framework.
Ongoing tax while you hold investments
Inherited investments often arrive as a collection of holdings that may not match your risk profile.
A useful way to frame it is:
If you had this amount in cash today, would you buy these exact investments?
If the answer is “no”, that doesn’t automatically mean “sell everything” — but it does mean you should treat inherited holdings like any other part of your portfolio and make sure they align with your goals.
Example (shares):
You inherit $120,000 of Australian bank shares. They may provide franked dividends, but also create concentration risk (one sector). A sensible approach might be:
Property is where inheritance decisions can become emotionally charged — and tax outcomes can vary significantly depending on whether the property was a main residence or an investment.
Inherited main residence: CGT may be reduced or eliminated
Australia’s CGT rules can allow a main residence exemption in common circumstances, but timing and usage matter (e.g., whether it was producing income, when it’s sold, and other conditions).
If you’re considering selling an inherited home, it can be worth getting advice early, because the difference between “sell sooner” and “sell later” can materially change the CGT outcome.
If the property was rented (or you rent it out)
If you keep the property and rent it:
Duty rules vary by state. Often, there is concessional treatment for transfers strictly “in accordance with the will”, but duty outcomes can change if beneficiaries:
D. Superannuation Death Benefits: often the biggest tax surprise
Super is frequently misunderstood because it may be paid outside the will and is taxed under specific rules.
Tax treatment depends on:
Decision 1: Stabilise your foundations
For accumulators and pre-retirees, the most valuable first step is often improving resilience:
Decision 2: Decide the role of the inheritance in your plan
A few common “good uses”:
This keeps decisions practical and reduces all-or-nothing thinking.
Bucket A — Cash (certainty + flexibility)
Used for:
Used for:
Bucket C — Property (concentration + complexity)
Property can be a strong long-term asset, but it’s also:
With shares and property, CGT outcomes can hinge on cost base rules and timing. Gather documents first, then decide.
Mistake 2: Keeping inherited assets out of guilt
Sentiment is normal. But your portfolio still needs to match your goals, timeframe and risk tolerance.
Mistake 3: Forgetting that estates can have income/tax reporting
If the estate earns income after death, there may be reporting requirements and beneficiaries may need statements from the executor.
Mistake 4: Assuming super death benefits are always tax-free
Super is its own category — and tax outcomes can differ significantly.
Build your bucket plan:
If you want, paste your preferred disclaimer and your firm’s call-to-action wording, and I’ll tailor the final paragraph and add two short “case study” callouts (one shares, one property) to make the article more engaging for website readers.
ATO – Deceased estates (overview):
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/deceased-estates
ATO – If you are a beneficiary of a deceased estate:
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/deceased-estates/if-you-are-a-beneficiary-of-a-deceased-estate
ATO – Doing trust tax returns for the deceased estate:
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/deceased-estates/doing-trust-tax-returns-for-the-deceased-estate
ATO – Doing a final tax return for the deceased person:
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/deceased-estates/doing-a-final-tax-return-for-the-deceased-person
ATO – Cost base of inherited assets (CGT):
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/investments-and-assets/capital-gains-tax/inherited-assets-and-capital-gains-tax/cost-base-of-inherited-assets
ATO – Inherited property and CGT:
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/investments-and-assets/capital-gains-tax/inherited-assets-and-capital-gains-tax/inherited-property-and-cgt
ATO – Extensions to the 2-year ownership period (inherited property CGT):
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/investments-and-assets/capital-gains-tax/inherited-assets-and-capital-gains-tax/extensions-to-the-2-year-ownership-period
ATO – Paying superannuation death benefits (super professionals, tax/components guidance):
https://www.ato.gov.au/tax-and-super-professionals/for-superannuation-professionals/apra-regulated-funds/paying-benefits/paying-superannuation-death-benefits
Revenue NSW – Deceased estate transfers (transfer duty):
https://www.revenue.nsw.gov.au/taxes-duties-levies-royalties/transfer-duty/deceased-estate
Next Steps
To find out more about how a financial adviser can help, speak to us to get you moving in the right direction.
Important information and disclaimer
The information provided in this document is general information only and does not constitute personal advice. It has been prepared without taking into account any of your individual objectives, financial solutions or needs. Before acting on this information you should consider its appropriateness, having regard to your own objectives, financial situation and needs. You should read the relevant Product Disclosure Statements and seek personal advice from a qualified financial adviser. From time to time we may send you informative updates and details of the range of services we can provide.
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This is general information — your circumstances are different. If something in this article sparked a question, we’re happy to talk it through.
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