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What Are the Best Gifting Strategies to Reduce My Taxes?

Written December 23, 2025
Wide banner of check being written representing 2025 tax-efficient giftingPen filling out a check used to illustrate tax-efficient gift planning

If you’re a growing business owner, gifts aren’t just a generous gesture—they’re a planning tool. With thoughtful, tax-efficient gifting strategies, you can support family, fund causes you care about, and reduce future estate exposure. The key is following IRS gift tax rules with a proactive plan rather than last-minute transfers in December. At B.A.A.P., we approach gifting like any other strategic investment decision: align it to cash flow, ownership goals, and long-term wealth transfer. Any CPA firm can record history. Our firm will help you build a future.

How much can I give in 2025 without paying gift tax?

For 2025, the annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient. Gifts within this limit don’t require tax and generally avoid filing unless you’re splitting gifts with a spouse. Married couples can elect to “gift split,” effectively doubling to $38,000 per recipient if they file Form 709 to document the election. Amounts above the annual exclusion reduce your lifetime gift and estate tax exemption before any tax is due. For 2025, the lifetime exemption is $13.99 million per individual.

Which gifts are entirely outside the gift tax system?

Certain payments aren’t considered gifts if made directly to the provider: qualified tuition paid to an educational institution and medical expenses paid to the medical provider. These do not use your annual or lifetime limits, making them powerful tools when assisting family members.

How do charitable gifts reduce taxes—and what should I watch?

Cash gifts to qualifying public charities are generally deductible up to 60% of adjusted gross income when you itemize. Appreciated assets held more than a year can provide a double benefit: avoid capital gains and claim a deduction for fair market value, subject to percentage limits and documentation rules. Always confirm an organization’s status and keep written acknowledgments for gifts of $250 or more.

Where does gifting fit in a business owner’s bigger plan?

Think of gifting as part of estate planning through gifting—not an afterthought. Your operating company, retirement accounts, and brokerage assets all interact with tax-free gifting limits, lifetime gift tax exemption, and charitable gifting tax benefits. The right sequence can reduce your taxable estate with gifts while maintaining control and cash flow for operations.

What’s the difference between an accountant and an advisor on gifting strategy?

An accountant may record gifts and prepare Form 709 after the fact. A trusted advisor builds a forward plan: timing gifts with liquidity events, coordinating gift splitting for married couples, and modeling the impact on future estate exposure and business value. That’s the B.A.A.P. difference: we anticipate questions, plan before year-end, and integrate gifting with growth.

Which practical strategies should business owners consider in 2025?

  1. Use the annual exclusion early and often. Set up automated transfers for children or parents you support. Multiple recipients multiply benefits; five recipients can mean $95,000 transferred tax-free in 2025, or $190,000 with spousal splitting when reported on Form 709.
  2. Pay tuition and medical bills directly. Routing payments to the institution keeps them outside the gift tax regime entirely—ideal during college or health events.
  3. Consider appreciated securities to family in lower brackets. While gifts themselves aren’t income to recipients, future income and gains shift to the donee; watch the kiddie tax and basis carryover. Consult your tax pro before executing. 
  4. Use donor-advised funds or direct gifts of appreciated stock to charities. You may avoid gains and potentially increase deductions vs. cash, subject to AGI limits and charitable rules. 
  5. Align gifts with business liquidity events. If you’ll sell a minority stake or take a distribution, pre-event transfers of growth assets can move future appreciation out of your estate.
  6. Coordinate with estate tools as your wealth grows. For substantial transfers, trusts and advanced tax planning with gifts (for example, GRATs or SLATs) can leverage valuation discounts and the lifetime exemption, but they require bespoke legal work. 

Illustrative client example (fictional):

Jordan owns a multi-location physical therapy group with $3.2M in revenue. In Q2, Jordan expects a buy-in from a new partner. Before the deal, we map a gifting plan:

  • Jordan gifts $19,000 to each of three children and $19,000 to a parent for care needs; spouse elects gift splitting for a combined $152,000, reported on Form 709.
  • Jordan pays a niece’s university tuition directly to the school—fully outside gift limits.
  • Jordan contributes appreciated stock to a donor-advised fund, capturing a deduction within AGI limits and avoiding capital gains.
  • With counsel, Jordan shifts a small pre-transaction minority interest in a holding LLC to an irrevocable trust, applying a portion of the lifetime exemption to remove future appreciation from the estate.

Result: Jordan supports family, funds a multi-year giving plan, and reduces the future taxable estate while preserving operating cash for growth.

What filing or compliance steps should I expect?

  • Form 709 may be required when you exceed the annual gift tax exclusion or when you and your spouse split gifts—even if no tax is due. Keep contemporaneous documentation and valuations for non-cash gifts.
  • Keep receipts and acknowledgments for charitable gifts; obtain qualified appraisals where required.
  • Revisit your plan annually. Dollar limits and laws adjust; your business and family goals evolve.

How do I turn this into an action plan before year-end?

Start with a 45-minute strategy session: cash flow assessment, recipients and goals, asset selection (cash vs. appreciated assets), charitable strategy, and trust considerations. Then execute: schedule direct tuition/medical payments, automate annual gifts, and prepare documentation checklists.

Gifting can be both generous and strategic. With B.A.A.P. as your trusted business advisory partner, you’ll make smart moves that support people and causes while compounding long-term tax efficiency. Want this tailored to your business? Book a call now.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the annual gift tax exclusion for 2025?

The annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient. Married couples can elect to split gifts to reach $38,000 per recipient when they file Form 709.

Do gifts above the annual exclusion trigger immediate tax?

Not necessarily. Amounts over the annual exclusion reduce your lifetime gift and estate tax exemption first; you report them on Form 709. Tax is due only after you exhaust your lifetime exemption.

Can I pay a grandchild’s tuition or a parent’s medical bills without using my exclusion?

Yes—if you pay the institution or provider directly. These payments are excluded from gift tax and don’t use your annual or lifetime limits.

Are charitable gifts always deductible?

Deductions apply when you itemize and give to qualified organizations, subject to percentage-of-AGI limits and documentation rules. Appreciated assets can increase tax efficiency.

What is the lifetime gift and estate tax exemption in 2025?

The lifetime exemption is $13.99 million per individual in 2025, shared between lifetime gifts and your estate.

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