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Contact Congress about H.R. 1301: Death Tax Repeal Act

H.R. 1301 would end two federal taxes on large wealth transfers after death or across generations. Large lifetime gifts could still be taxed under a new gift tax setup.

Modern Action explains legislation in plain English, helps you choose whether to support, oppose, or ask for changes, and drafts a message tied to the bill, your stance, and the elected officials who can act on it.

Death Tax Repeal Act is a House bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

Latest action on H.R. 1301: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

Who this affects: This bill mainly affects people with very large estates and families planning major wealth transfers. It also affects tax planners, trustees, and heirs who deal with gifts, trusts, and transfers across generations. People with smaller estates would likely see little direct change because they usually do not owe these federal taxes now.

Why this matters: This bill would change how the federal government taxes large transfers of wealth. Instead of taxing some wealth at death or when it skips a generation, the main remaining tax would be on large gifts made during life. That could change how wealthy families use gifts, trusts, and estate plans. It could also reduce federal revenue, but the bill does not give a budget estimate.

Key provisions in H.R. 1301

  • The federal estate tax would end for people who die after the bill becomes law. This applies to estates of people who die on or after that date.
  • The generation-skipping transfer tax would end for later transfers. This tax applies to some transfers to grandchildren or other younger generations.
  • Some qualified domestic trusts would stay under older estate tax rules for a while. These are special trusts for non-citizen surviving spouses, and the old rules would end either right away or 10 years later, depending on the distribution.
  • The federal gift tax would stay in place. The bill rewrites how it is figured and sets rates from 18% to 35%.
  • The lifetime gift tax credit would be based on $10 million in taxable gifts. It would no longer use one combined estate-and-gift tax amount.

How Modern Action helps you take action on H.R. 1301

You do not have to start with a blank letter. Modern Action turns the bill, your position, and the relevant congressional context into a message you can edit and send. The goal is to make contacting Congress clear, specific, and useful without forcing you to parse bill text or figure out the right office on your own.

Questions people ask about H.R. 1301

What is H.R. 1301?
H.R. 1301 would end two federal taxes on large wealth transfers after death or across generations. Large lifetime gifts could still be taxed under a new gift tax setup.
How do I support or oppose H.R. 1301?
Choose support, oppose, or ask for changes on Modern Action. The action flow drafts the message for you and keeps the wording tied to this bill.
Who should I contact about H.R. 1301?
Modern Action uses your location to route the action to the congressional offices relevant to the bill and your representation.
Can Modern Action explain H.R. 1301 before I act?
Yes. Modern Action gives you a plain-English summary, current status, and action context before you send anything.

Keep acting on Modern Action

More ways to act on this issue

Compare the broader issue and related bills without leaving Modern Action.

Related issues

  • Contact your reps on Estate, Gift, and Trust Transfer TaxesWhether Congress should raise, preserve, narrow, or repeal taxes on large estates, large lifetime gifts, generation-skipping transfers, grantor trusts, dynasty trusts, GRATs, and family-controlled entities.

Related bills

  • Take action on H.R. 2038: American Housing and Economic Mobility Act of 2025
  • Take action on S. 587: Death Tax Repeal Act of 2025
  • Take action on S. 1108: Death Tax Repeal Act
  • Take action on S. 934: American Housing and Economic Mobility Act of 2025
  • Take action on H.R. 7035: Death Tax Repeal Act