Community Property

Client Recommendations Medium Relevance

A marital property ownership system used in 9 U.S. states (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin) where assets acquired during marriage are owned 50/50 by both spouses. At death of either spouse, the deceased spouse's half receives a step-up in basis, and in community property states, both halves receive a step-up in basis (double step-up benefit). Property acquired before marriage or by gift/inheritance remains separate property.

Example

A married couple in California (community property state) purchases stock during marriage for $100,000 (cost basis). When one spouse dies and the stock is worth $300,000, both halves receive a step-up in basis to $300,000 (the deceased's $150,000 half and the surviving spouse's $150,000 half). If the surviving spouse sells immediately at $300,000, there is zero capital gains tax. In contrast, JTWROS provides step-up only on the deceased's half, leaving the survivor with $200,000 basis and $100,000 taxable gain.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse community property with JTWROS (Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship). Both provide survivorship rights, but community property offers the double step-up in basis advantage that JTWROS does not. Additionally, students forget that community property is STATE-SPECIFIC (only 9 states) and does not apply nationwide. Finally, many mistakenly believe ALL property is community property in these states, when separate property (acquired before marriage, gifts, inheritances) remains individual.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying the 9 community property states (AZ, CA, ID, LA, NV, NM, TX, WA, WI)
  • Understanding 50/50 ownership of assets acquired during marriage
  • Recognizing the double step-up in basis benefit at first spouse's death
  • Distinguishing community property from JTWROS for tax planning purposes
  • Understanding that separate property (pre-marriage, gifts, inheritances) is not community property

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Community property states 9 states Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin
Ownership split during marriage 50/50 Each spouse owns 50% of assets acquired during marriage
Step-up in basis at death Both halves (100%) Both the deceased spouse's half AND surviving spouse's half receive step-up to fair market value

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Robert and Elena, a married couple living in California, purchased investment property during their marriage for $200,000. Robert dies when the property is worth $600,000. Elena is considering selling the property shortly after Robert's death. What is the tax implication of this sale if Elena sells at $600,000?

Question 2

Which of the following states uses community property law for marital assets?

🔥

Master Client Recommendations Concepts

CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Community Property and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.

Access Free Beta
Question 3

A married couple in Texas (community property state) holds a brokerage account with securities purchased during marriage with an original cost basis of $400,000, now worth $1,000,000. One spouse dies. The surviving spouse is comparing the tax treatment if the account is registered as community property versus JTWROS. What is the basis difference between these two registrations immediately after the first spouse's death?

Question 4

All of the following statements about community property are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

Michelle and David married in 2010 and live in Nevada (community property state). They are evaluating account ownership options for a new brokerage account to hold $500,000 in highly appreciated stock (current value, original cost basis $150,000). Which of the following statements about community property registration for this account are accurate?

1. If David dies first, the entire account receives a step-up in basis to current fair market value
2. The account would be owned 50/50 by both spouses
3. The account would provide the same estate tax benefits as JTWROS
4. Assets in the account would automatically pass to Michelle if David dies

💡 Memory Aid

Remember "A CAL ID TWIN" for community property states: AZ, CA, LA, ID, TX, WI, NV, NM, WA (9 states total). Spouses own 50/50 automatically on marital assets. The superpower: "Double Step-Up at Death" (both halves step up to FMV, not just the deceased's half like JTWROS). Think "Community = Complete step-up, JTWROS = Just half." Separate property (before marriage, gifts, inheritance) stays separate.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: