Estate planning helps you minimize estate taxes and distribute
your assets according to your wishes. While most people will need
the help of professionals, we've included several articles on
the topic:
If you have any questions or would like to discuss your estate
planning situation in more detail, please call us at (512) 327-9311
or e-mail us at ifp@ifp-center.com.
Estate
Planning under the 2001 Tax Act
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001
has made the estate planning process more complicated. The estate
tax is scheduled to phase out gradually from 2002 to 2009, be
repealed in 2010, and then reinstated in 2011 based on 2001 tax
laws. That, of course, assumes that there will be no further tax
legislation during this time. Before reviewing how this may impact
your estate planning strategies, you should understand the major
changes:
The estate tax phase-out will occur as follows:
| |
Exemption Amount |
Highest Tax Rate |
| 2002 |
$1,000,000 |
50% |
| 2003 |
1,000,000 |
49% |
| 2004 |
1,500,000 |
48% |
| 2005 |
1,500,000 |
47% |
| 2006 |
2,000,000 |
46% |
| 2007 |
2,000,000 |
45% |
| 2008 |
2,000,000 |
45% |
| 2009 |
3,500,000 |
45% |
| 2010 |
N/A |
Repealed |
When the estate tax is repealed, the provision allowing inherited
assets to receive a step-up in basis to market value at the decedent's
date of death will also be repealed. Inherited property will then
generally have a basis equal to the lesser of the decedent's adjusted
basis or the property's fair market value at the decedent's date
of death, with three exceptions: 1) $1,300,000 of basis can be
added to assets. 2) Unused capital losses, net operating losses,
and certain built-in losses can increase this cap. 3) An additional
$3,000,000 of basis can be added to assets inherited by a surviving
spouse.
The lifetime gift exemption increased from $675,000 in 2001
to $1,000,000 in 2002 and will remain at that amount. The maximum
gift tax rate will equal the maximum estate tax rate through 2009
and after that will equal the maximum individual income tax rate.
The generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax exemption will increase
from $1,100,000 in 2002 (adjusted for inflation in 2003) to $1,500,000
in 2004 and then will follow the estate tax exemption schedule.
The GST tax will also be repealed in 2010 and reinstated in 2011.
The GST tax rate will equal the maximum estate tax rate.
Your estate planning strategies should now encompass the possibility
that you may die during three periods - the phase-out period,
the year of estate tax repeal, and after reinstatement in 2011.
What impact will all of these changes have on your estate planning
strategies? Consider the following tips when reviewing your estate
plan:
- Examine your current estate planning
documents carefully. Many documents indicate that
trusts should be funded with assets equal to the unified credit
applicable exclusion amount or GST tax exemption amount. With
the exemption amount increasing significantly between 2002 and
2009, this may result in too large a percentage of your estate
going into trusts. The higher exemption amounts may leave more
than you intended to your grandchildren or may place so much
in a credit shelter or other trust that your spouse receives
very little of your estate outright. Be sure to examine your
estate planning documents every couple of years during this transition
period.
- Remember that there are also non-estate-tax
reasons for planning your estate. Even if the increases
in exemption amounts mean that your estate won't be subject to
federal estate taxes, there are still reasons to plan your estate.
You probably still need a will to provide for the distribution
of your estate and to name guardians for minor children. You
should also consider a durable power of attorney, which designates
someone to control your financial affairs if you become incapacitated,
and a health care proxy, which delegates health care decisions
to another person when you are unable to make these decisions.
- Watch for any changes to your state's
estate taxes. The state death tax credit allowed against
the federal estate tax will be reduced by 25% in 2002, 50% in
2003, 75% in 2004, and completely repealed in 2005. It will be
replaced with a deduction for death taxes actually paid. Many
states have tied their estate taxes to this federal estate tax
credit, so that total estate taxes were not increased for any
amounts paid to states. With that credit being phased out and
repealed, current formulas may result in the payment of more
estate taxes or states may increase their estate tax rates to
make up for the lost revenue. Make sure to watch for state changes,
which could have a significant impact on your estate.
- Review documents dealing with your
potential incapacity. You may want to give family
members more flexibility in determining what life support measures
to use. While it may sound morbid, family members of individuals
with large estates may have differing views about how to handle
a serious illness during the 2009 to 2011 period.
- Consider allocating specific assets
to heirs. Due to the three exceptions for adding basis
to assets in 2010, you may want to specifically allocate assets
with low basis to your spouse and assets with a higher basis
to other heirs.
- Continue an annual gifting program,
since it does not result in the payment of gift taxes.
(See the article "Making Lifetime Gifts"
for more details.)
- Be cautious of undoing any estate
planning strategies already in place. If these strategies
were viable for your estate before the new tax act, they probably
are still viable. Those strategies could include life insurance
purchased to pay estate taxes or trusts established for estate
planning purposes.
- Plan for potential capital gains
taxes. With the loss of the step-up in basis in 2010,
heirs of larger estates may find that their tax burden has shifted
from an estate tax burden to a capital gains tax burden. You
may want to make provisions to help your heirs pay those taxes.
- Keep records to comply with the
new carryover basis rules. Heirs may have difficulty
calculating the original basis of assets that have been owned
for years or even decades. If the step-up in basis is repealed,
you can help your heirs by keeping detailed records for basis
calculations.
Instead of eliminating the need for estate planning, the eventual
repeal of the estate tax has made estate planning more complicated.
Back to topics.
Making Lifetime Gifts
Since estate taxes are scheduled to be phased out gradually
and then reinstated in 2011, you may still want to make gifts
during your lifetime to reduce your taxable estate. Some tips
to consider include:
- Use your annual gift tax exclusion
amount. In 2002, you can gift up to $11,000 ($22,000
if the gift is split with your spouse) to any individual free
of gift taxes. This amount is adjusted annually for inflation,
in $1,000 increments. You can make these gifts to any number
of individuals. Any future appreciation or income generated on
those gifts is also removed from your estate.
- Pay medical and education expenses
for your heirs. Certain amounts paid directly to institutions
for these expenses can be made gift-tax free.
- Consider using your lifetime gift
exclusion. This exclusion increased to $1,000,000
in 2002 and is in addition to the amount you can gift annually
without paying gift taxes. Thus, those with estates large enough
to be subject to estate taxes may consider using this exclusion
to remove assets from their taxable estate.
- Look into ways to maximize the benefit
of your exclusion amounts. For instance, individuals
who transfer noncontrolling interests in businesses, farms, real
estate, and other assets during their lifetime may be able to
assign a minority interest discount to the gift's value. Gifting
assets to certain types of trusts, such as qualified personal
residence trusts and grantor retained annuity trusts, allows
you to place an asset in trust now, use the asset for a period
of time, and thus place a lower value on the gift.
- Avoid making taxable gifts to heirs
for now. The scheduled phase-out and repeal of the
estate tax means that more estates will be able to minimize the
payment of estate taxes.
- Gift property that has the potential
to increase in value, but has not already done so.
A lifetime gift's tax basis remains your original basis plus
any gift tax paid. Thus, if you gift an asset with a low basis,
your heirs could owe significant capital gains tax when the asset
is sold.
- Make charitable contributions during
your lifetime. Charitable contributions made after
death are free of estate taxes. With the future of the estate
tax uncertain, you may want to make charitable contributions
during your life. Those contributions still lower your taxable
estate and will also allow you to receive an income tax deduction
for the contributions.
- Keep your own needs in mind.
While gifting can be a valuable estate planning strategy, you
don't want to gift so much of your estate that you have difficulty
making ends meet later in life.
Back to topics.
Do
You Still Need Life Insurance for Estate Purposes?
One of the more popular reasons to own life insurance is to
use the proceeds to help fund estate taxes. If the policy is properly
structured, the proceeds will not be included in your taxable
estate and your beneficiaries will not have to pay federal income
or gift taxes. However, with the eventual repeal of the estate
tax in 2010, you may wonder if there is still a need for life
insurance for estate purposes.
Since the estate tax won't be repealed until 2010, your estate
plan should consider strategies to deal with estate taxes in the
event you die before then. Thus, life insurance may be an appropriate
estate planning strategy until at least 2010. Even after that,
however, there is no certainty that the estate tax repeal will
be permanent. Due to the sunset provisions of the Economic Growth
and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, the estate tax will
be reinstated in 2011, based on 2001 tax laws, unless further
legislation is enacted.
Even if the estate tax repeal is permanent, there are still
situations where the use of life insurance will be an appropriate
estate planning strategy. Some of those situations include:
- To provide liquidity to an estate.
If your estate consists primarily of illiquid assets, such as
real estate or a business, you may want to use insurance so your
family won't be forced to sell or mortgage assets.
- To equalize inheritances. Perhaps
your primary asset is a family business, which is run by one
of your children. You may want to leave the business to that
child, but need additional funds to equalize the inheritance
for your other children. Insurance proceeds can be used for that
purpose.
- To transfer wealth to heirs.
Even if the estate tax is permanently repealed, life insurance
proceeds still retain their income tax advantage - proceeds are
paid to beneficiaries free of federal income taxes. Thus, life
insurance may still be an appropriate way to increase your bequest
to your heirs.
- To leave a large charitable contribution.
You may want to leave a large charitable contribution
to a charity without depleting the assets left to your heirs.
To do this, you could designate the charity as beneficiary of
a life insurance policy.
- To help heirs fund future tax liabilities.
After the estate tax is repealed, inherited assets
will no longer receive a step up in basis to the market value
at the date of the decedent's death. Instead, inherited property
will generally have a basis equal to the lesser of the decedent's
adjusted basis or the property's fair market value at the date
of the decedent's death. To that basis, three items can be added:
1) $1,300,000 of basis; 2) unused capital losses, net operating
losses, and certain built-in losses; and 3) an additional $3,000,000
of basis to assets transferred to a surviving spouse. If you
leave substantial assets with low basis to your heirs, they may
face significant future tax liabilities. You may want to help
them with those tax liabilities through the use of life insurance.
Back to topics.
Distributing
Money to Your Children
Turning wealth over to children or grandchildren can raise
some troubling issues. While a large inheritance can alleviate
financial concerns for your heirs, you probably don't want that
inheritance to remove the incentive to work hard or to lead a
productive life. You also don't want your heirs to spend the money
irresponsibly, obtaining no long-term benefits from the inheritance.
To help you assess how your heirs would handle an inheritance,
consider making lifetime gifts to them. Every year you can make
gifts, up to $11,000 in 2002 ($22,000 if you split the gift with
your spouse), to any individual tax free. You can then assess
how well they handle these gifts. Do they waste the money on extravagant
purchases or set it aside in savings? Are they appreciative of
the gifts or feel it is their right to receive the gifts? Their
actions can help you decide whether you need to control the distribution
of their inheritance.
If you want to control distributions, you can set up a trust,
attaching conditions to those distributions. Those conditions
could include:
- Spreading the income over many years
or decades. You don't have to turn your entire estate
over to your children when they turn 21. You may want to distribute
pre-determined percentages of your estate when your children
reach certain ages. Or you can distribute only income from the
trust until your children reach a certain age, then distribute
the remaining assets.
- Making distributions contingent
on achieving certain goals. You
can designate that distributions be made when your child finishes
college, gets a job, or has children. You can also base distributions
on how much income your child earns. For instance, you can allow
the child to take 50¢ from the trust for every $1 he/she
earns. Or you may wish to supplement the incomes of heirs who
choose careers in government, educational institutions, or charitable
organizations. These types of distributions can help encourage
behavior you feel is important.
- Designating some funds for health
problems, education funding, or emergencies. That
way, a child who is confronted with serious health problems or
other emergencies will have financial resources to help deal
with these problems. You can allow your trustee to decide when
the funds should be distributed.
You can't totally control how your heirs spend their inheritance,
but you can control when and how they receive it. By doing so,
hopefully you can help teach them how to handle their inheritance
responsibly.
Back to topics.
Integrating
an Inheritance
When you receive investments as part of an inheritance, you
must integrate them into your overall portfolio. In many cases,
that will require changes to your portfolio. Consider the following:
- Review each inherited investment
as if it were a prospective investment. Retain those
that fit your financial goals and have good potential. Consider
selling any that won't meet your financial goals or that you
don't have the expertise to manage.
- Evaluate the costs before selling.
For tax purposes, the inherited investment's tax basis
is stepped up to market value on the date of death. Thus, selling
inherited assets soon after receiving them typically won't result
in large capital gains taxes. However, review the transaction
costs for both selling the existing investment and reinvesting
in a new one. Some investments may also have a deferred sales
charge.
- Your asset allocation percentages
may change drastically when you add the inherited portfolio to
your existing investments. Decide whether to move
back to your original allocation immediately or gradually over
a couple of years.
- Don't keep inherited investments
for sentimental reasons. Selling those investments
doesn't mean that you're questioning the investment capabilities
of the person who gave you the assets. You just have different
financial goals than that individual.
Back to topics.
Copyright © 2002. These articles intend to offer factual
and up-to-date information on the subjects discussed, but should
not be regarded as a complete analysis of these subjects. The
appropriate professional advisers should be consulted before implementing
any options presented. No party assumes liability for any loss
or damage resulting from errors or omissions or reliance on or
use of this material.