2026 IRS-Qualified Appraisals in Georgia: What Heirs & CPAs Need to Know About Step-Up Valuations

Inheriting a property in Georgia can be a blessing — or a tax trap — depending on how you handle the real estate’s valuation.

In 2026, the IRS is tightening review protocols for estate filings, especially when it comes to step-up in basis valuations. If you’re filing IRS Form 706 or 1041, or advising someone who is, you need an IRS-qualified real estate appraisal — and it needs to be done right the first time.

Recently, we helped a CPA and her client in Atlanta resolve a date of death valuation discrepancy that could’ve cost the estate over $15,000 in excess capital gains. The mistake? They used a sale price instead of the fair market value on the actual date of death. A licensed retrospective appraisal corrected the record — and avoided the audit.

Let’s walk through how to make sure you don’t make that mistake.

Step-by-Step: How to Ensure Your Appraisal Meets IRS Guidelines

Step 1: Understand What the IRS Actually Requires

According to the IRS’s estate and gift tax rules (IRS Pub. 559), a real estate appraisal must:

CMAs, Zestimates, and agent estimates do not qualify.
You need a formal, signed, IRS-qualified appraisal report.

Step 2: Make Sure It’s a Retrospective Appraisal

The appraisal must be dated as of the day your loved one passed — not the date of the report, not the sales date, not “today.”

This is called a retrospective effective date, and it’s critical.
If your report doesn’t show that? The IRS could toss it out — or worse, flag the filing.

Step 3: Find a Local, IRS-Qualified Appraiser Near You

Searches like:

  • “IRS-qualified appraisal near me”

  • “Georgia estate tax appraisal”

  • “real estate appraisal IRS qualified Atlanta”

…are how most clients find us.

We serve the entire Atlanta metro and surrounding counties with licensed, retrospective appraisals for estate and probate purposes. Every report we deliver is built to hold up under IRS review and professional scrutiny.

Step 4: Document Everything for Your CPA or Attorney

We include:

  • A PDF copy of your report for legal/tax purposes

  • A simplified value summary

  • A signed certification from your appraiser

  • Support for any follow-up your CPA or attorney may need

No last-minute scrambling. No confusing paperwork. No mistakes.

Pro Tip for Heirs, Executors, and CPAs

If you’re filing Form 706 or handling asset distributions, don’t wait until tax season peaks.
We only take a
limited number of estate appraisals each month to ensure turnaround time stays fast and accurate.

Here’s What’s Included When You Work With REI Valuations

✔ Licensed Georgia Appraiser (IRS-qualified)
✔ Retrospective date of death valuation
✔ USPAP-compliant methodology
✔ Court- and IRS-acceptable report format
✔ Clean documentation for tax filings
✔ Delivery within 5–7 business days
✔ Free upgrade to 3-day priority turnaround if you mention this blog ($75 value)

Filing Estate Taxes in Georgia? Don’t Risk the IRS Kicking Back Your Report.

We specialize in IRS-qualified estate and probate appraisals across Georgia.
Secure your licensed appraisal today — and file with confidence.

Only 3 estate appraisal slots left this week.
Request yours before calendars fill up.

Request Your Date of Death Appraisal Now

January 6th 2026 9:51am

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