Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Federal Estate and Gift Taxes - an Introduction

The federal estate and gift taxes--we sometimes call them "wealth transfer taxes"--are the reason for much of what I do for my higher net-worth clients.  These taxes have gotten a lot of attention and debate time among pundits and politicians recently, and we're going to be talking about them a lot on this blog.  This post is the first in a series on how these taxes work, and what you can do to minimize their impact on your family.

The stated policy purpose of the wealth transfer taxes is to prevent the creation of large concentrations of inherited private wealth.  The tax is therefore supposed to be paid only by "the wealthy."  There's a never-ending debate over whether this is a proper thing for the government to be taxing in the first place, and whether it's not so much a tax on dynastic wealth as it is a tax on upward mobility--but all I want to talk about on this blog is how the taxes work, and how good estate planning responds to them.

While the estate tax is imposed on any transfer at death, and the gift tax on any transfer during lifetime, the Internal Revenue Code gives you a "unified credit" which cancels out the tax on a certain amount of wealth being transferred. We usually talk about the "exemption equivalent" amount that is protected from the credit, rather than the amount of the credit, because it's easier for clients to understand.  However you want to think of it, if the wealth that you have to pass on to the next generation is less than the exemption equivalent, the federal wealth transfer taxes aren't an issue you need to worry about.  (The Ohio estate tax might be, but that's another topic for another time only if you die before January 1, 2013.)


Right now, the exemption equivalent is $5 million, but that could change in a very taxpayer-unfavorable way at the end of next year.  We'll go into why that is in a future installment.

There are a couple of other mechanisms that provide relief from the estate and gift taxes.  The policy of the current estate tax is to tax accumulated wealth once per generation, so transfers between spouses are accorded a "marital deduction" and are thereby not taxed.  Also, mostly for administrative convenience, you are allowed a certain amount of gifts each year, the "annual exclusion," which are not counted for tax purposes.  The annual exclusion is $13,000 per recipient per year, and that number is adjusted for inflation from time to time.

In our next installment, we'll talk about what gets included in an estate for estate tax purposes.

(Updated in response to the repeal of the Ohio estate tax effective 1/1/13.)

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