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Estate Planning Overview: Basic Rules
Basic Estate Planning Considerations
Minimizing current and future income taxes - ways to handle
and/or structure assets to provide optimum income tax relief
while meeting the current and future goals of the client
Minimizing possible estate and GST taxes upon death
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lifetime gifting and testamentary planning and asset structuring
to provide optimum estate tax treatment; can also include
planning for payment of estate taxes expected in larger estates
Controlling division and distribution of estate - deciding
who gets to share in your estate, what they get, and under what
conditions they get or don’t get their share; provides vehicle
for clarifying your testamentary intentions and desires
Emergency contingencies - use of durable powers of attorney,
and Living Trusts, to designate persons to act on your behalf
when you cannot act for yourself; also allows you to provide
guidance and instruction concerning personal care,
life-sustaining treatments and financial matters
Long-term healthcare - planning to ensure sufficient
resources to provide for long-term care and treatment if needed
Elder care - care and treatment of the elderly, including
obtaining Medi-Cal, assisted living and conservatorships
Simplification of estate administration and reduction of
costs thereof - organizing estate and assets so estate can be
administered in an orderly and easy manner; reduces costs by
streamlining administration and avoiding probate
What is the "Estate?"
Ë Market value of all
assets – including life insurance, pension benefits, business
interests, tangible personal property.
Includes property owned by or in which an individual has an
interest – may even include assets previously sold or gifted
to children or loans provided to children.
What can you gift to others without paying tax dollars
out-of-pocket?
Unlimited gifts to U.S. citizen spouse, either during
lifetime or at death.
Non-U.S. citizen spouse, can gift up to $110,000 per year.
Note this amount is indexed for inflation and may increase
slightly each year.
Annual gifts to others not in excess of $11,000 per recipient
per year.
Lifetime transfers in excess of the annual exclusion not to
exceed $1,000,000
Spouses can join in gifts to double the exemption amounts.
Unlimited gifts to charity, either during lifetime or at
death.
What are the forms of holding title?
Separate Property – owned prior to marriage or received by
gift or inheritance.
Community Property – acquired during marriage through the
earnings of either spouse (absence a written agreement to the
contrary).
Tenancy-in-Common – each tenant owns a fractional interest
in the whole.
Joint Tenancy – each tenant owns 100% of the asset. (Don’t
understand? That’s why you need a lawyer.)
Trust – the trustee holds title for the benefit of another
(this can be you).
Custodian – the custodian holds title for the benefit of
another, usually a minor child or young adult (age 25 or under).
What are the techniques of leaving property to others?
Will: Testamentary gift; requires probate. Do not
confuse probate with estate taxes. Statutory compensation for
attorneys and executors based upon gross value of assets. For
example, on $1 million in assets the attorney and executor each
receive compensation in the amount of $21,150.
Joint Tenancy: Property automatically owned by
surviving joint tenant
"Totten Trust": Bank account left to a
surviving beneficiary (a.k.a. pay-on-death account).
Living Trust: Created during lifetime, revocable;
designed to avoid probate. Can minimize the effect of estate
taxes.
Irrevocable Trust: Created during lifetime,
irrevocable; designed to avoid probate, usually for avoidance
of estate taxes.
Uniform Transfers to Minors Act: Available to minor
children and young adults (age 25 and younger).
Contract: Life insurance, pension and IRA, salary
continuation agreements.
Life Estate: Retained life interest in personal
residence or farm, then passing to charity.
Charitable Remainder Trust.
Pooled Income Fund.
Lead Trust.
Summary of Economic Growth and Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2001 ("EGTRRA")
|
Year |
Estate Tax Exemption |
| 2002 |
$1 million |
| 2003 |
$1 million
|
| 2004 |
$1.5 million |
| 2005 |
$1.5 million |
| 2006 |
$2 million |
| 2007 |
$2 million |
| 2008 |
$2 million |
| 2009 |
$3.5 million |
| 2010 |
N/A |
| 2011+ |
$1 million |
|
Top Estate Tax Rate |
Exemption |
|
50% |
$1.1+ million |
|
49%
|
$1.5 million |
|
48%
|
$1.5 million |
|
47%
|
$2 million |
|
46%
|
$2 million |
|
45%
|
$2 million |
|
45%
|
$3.5 million |
|
45%
|
N/A |
|
N/A
|
$1.1+ million |
|
55%
|
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|
GST
Top GST
Tax Rate
|
Lifetime Gift Exemption |
|
50%
|
$1 million |
| 49% |
$1 million |
| 48% |
$1 million |
| 47% |
$1 million |
| 46% |
$1 million |
| 45% |
$1 million |
| 45% |
$1 million |
| 45% |
$1 million |
| N/A |
$1 million |
| 55% |
$1 million |
There will be no estate tax for deaths occurring
during 2010. However, the changes made by EGTRRA automatically expire on
December 31, 2010, at which time the top estate tax rate will revert to
55%, the large-estate surcharge will apply, and the amount that can be
protected from estate taxes will drop to $1 million.
When an asset is sold, the owner pays capital gains
taxes on the profit. For these purposes, "profit" is the
excess of the sales price over the owner’s tax basis in the property.
If the owner bought the property, his or her tax basis is generally
equal to what he or she paid for it.
Under current law, when a death occurs, a
beneficiary who inherits an asset is allowed to use the asset’s
value on the date the deceased owner died as his or her new tax
basis in the asset. Because of this "step up" in
basis, only the post-death appreciation is subject to capital
gains taxes if the beneficiary decides to sell the asset.
Under EGTRRA, for people dying in 2010, this
"step up" is greatly limited. For assets inherited
during 2010, the beneficiary’s basis will be the lesser
of
(i) the deceased’s adjusted basis, or
(ii) the asset’s
value on date of death. The new basis could go down, as well as
up.
So if you paid $1,000 for the asset originally, and it was
worth $500 on the date of your death, your heirs would inherit
the asset with a $500 cost basis ("stepped down").
To help offset the additional income (or
capital gains) tax beneficiaries will pay, EGTRRA gives every
U.S. citizen and resident a $1.3 million "aggregate basis
increase" to allocate among the deceased’s assets.
Estates of non-resident aliens are given only a $60,000 basis
increase.
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This increase can be allocated among
assets in any way the deceased’s personal
representative decides, but no asset’s basis can be
increased above its date of death value. The basis
increase cannot be applied to several types of assets,
including, for example, assets in your retirement plan.
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The estate of a married person
receives an additional $3 million basis increase to be
allocated to property passing to the surviving spouse.
For non-resident aliens, this $3 million additional
basis increase is not available. The additional increase
can be combined with the basic $1.3 million increase, so
that assets passing to a spouse are eligible for a $4.3
million basis increase. |

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