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When someone passes away, families are suddenly faced with real estate decisions, trust paperwork, tax responsibilities, and deadlines they never expected. Most trustees don't realize they've just taken on a legal and financial job — one that comes with liability, rules, and complex tax requirements.
In this episode, I talk with Sargis Isavi, a CPA and Tax Manager with 25+ years of experience specializing in trusts, estates, and high-net-worth tax planning, to break down exactly what people need to know when inheriting property.
This is one of the clearest conversations you'll hear on trust administration, step-up in basis, tax risks, trustee mistakes, and how to avoid costly penalties. All from a CPAs perspective.
What You'll Learn in This Episode 1. What actually happens when someone inherits a propertyA step-by-step breakdown from a tax and accounting perspective of what trustees must do immediately after a loved one passes away.
2. The CPA's real role in trust administrationMost trustees think they only need an attorney — Sargis explains why a CPA is equally essential and how they work together.
3. Should you keep using the decedent'CPA?Why trusts require a specialist, not a generalist CPA — and how the wrong choice can lead to thousands in penalties.
4. The hidden tax traps trustees missTrusts hit the highest federal tax bracket (37%) at just ~$13,450 of income. Sargis explains why this catches people off guard.
5. Grantor vs. Irrevocable TrustsHow they work, how taxes differ, and what trustees must understand before distributing anything.
6. The biggest mistakes trustees makeIncluding:
Commingling trust funds
Missing tax filing deadlines
Not securing trust assets
Poor record-keeping
Causing disputes among beneficiaries
Using the wrong professionals
Not understanding trust terms
Real examples of clients who saved hundreds of thousands simply by correcting a missed step-up.
8. Estate & inheritance taxes — and the 2025 law changes
Everything trustees must know about:
The $13.99M exemption
The possible drop to ~$7M
Which states tax estates
Form 706 & portability
Why "gross value" matters more than net value
Not from a real estate agent — from a licensed appraiser. Sargis explains why the IRS challenges BPOs and how to avoid future tax bills.
10. Real client storiesSargis shares cases where expert CPA work resulted in:
$15,000 penalty abatement
$200,000 tax refund
Over $1M in reduced estate tax These examples show why who you hire matters.
Key Takeaways
A will alone does NOT avoid probate.
Trusts must be funded or they're useless.
Trustees can be personally liable for mistakes.
Taxes on estates are complex — small errors can = big penalties.
Planning before death saves families money.
You need a team: CPA + Estate Attorney + Financial Advisor.
Always get your trust reviewed and updated regularly.
By Jeff Landau5
33 ratings
When someone passes away, families are suddenly faced with real estate decisions, trust paperwork, tax responsibilities, and deadlines they never expected. Most trustees don't realize they've just taken on a legal and financial job — one that comes with liability, rules, and complex tax requirements.
In this episode, I talk with Sargis Isavi, a CPA and Tax Manager with 25+ years of experience specializing in trusts, estates, and high-net-worth tax planning, to break down exactly what people need to know when inheriting property.
This is one of the clearest conversations you'll hear on trust administration, step-up in basis, tax risks, trustee mistakes, and how to avoid costly penalties. All from a CPAs perspective.
What You'll Learn in This Episode 1. What actually happens when someone inherits a propertyA step-by-step breakdown from a tax and accounting perspective of what trustees must do immediately after a loved one passes away.
2. The CPA's real role in trust administrationMost trustees think they only need an attorney — Sargis explains why a CPA is equally essential and how they work together.
3. Should you keep using the decedent'CPA?Why trusts require a specialist, not a generalist CPA — and how the wrong choice can lead to thousands in penalties.
4. The hidden tax traps trustees missTrusts hit the highest federal tax bracket (37%) at just ~$13,450 of income. Sargis explains why this catches people off guard.
5. Grantor vs. Irrevocable TrustsHow they work, how taxes differ, and what trustees must understand before distributing anything.
6. The biggest mistakes trustees makeIncluding:
Commingling trust funds
Missing tax filing deadlines
Not securing trust assets
Poor record-keeping
Causing disputes among beneficiaries
Using the wrong professionals
Not understanding trust terms
Real examples of clients who saved hundreds of thousands simply by correcting a missed step-up.
8. Estate & inheritance taxes — and the 2025 law changes
Everything trustees must know about:
The $13.99M exemption
The possible drop to ~$7M
Which states tax estates
Form 706 & portability
Why "gross value" matters more than net value
Not from a real estate agent — from a licensed appraiser. Sargis explains why the IRS challenges BPOs and how to avoid future tax bills.
10. Real client storiesSargis shares cases where expert CPA work resulted in:
$15,000 penalty abatement
$200,000 tax refund
Over $1M in reduced estate tax These examples show why who you hire matters.
Key Takeaways
A will alone does NOT avoid probate.
Trusts must be funded or they're useless.
Trustees can be personally liable for mistakes.
Taxes on estates are complex — small errors can = big penalties.
Planning before death saves families money.
You need a team: CPA + Estate Attorney + Financial Advisor.
Always get your trust reviewed and updated regularly.