Showing posts with label gift tax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gift tax. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Gift Tax Law


It is unusal but it does happen. I had a client who was the sole beneficiary under his aunt's will. His aunt did not have any children or a surviving spouse. However, there were other relatives but the aunt only saw fit to leave her estate to this particular nephew. No one disputed the will. The client came to me because he wanted to share the wealth with others.

Bottom line; the inheritance is his and he has to pay all of the inheritance taxes. If he chooses to share any of his inheritance, it would be a gift to the other relatives. Whenever assets are given to another for less than its full value, the amount by which the asset’s value exceeds the money paid for them is a gift. In this case, the $95,000 for each of 5 relatives would be a gift of $475,000. Everyone has a lifetime gift exclusion amount of $1,000,000. As long as he does not gift over $1,000,000 during his lifetime, there will be no gift tax due. However, there is a gift tax filing required if his gift over a certain amount annually. This annual exclusion amount for 2009 is $13,000. Therefore, in his case, the gift tax filing will be required.

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Thursday, September 3, 2009

Protecting Your Wealth For Your Family - GRAT



I read a great article on Forbes.com, Keeping Family Wealth From the Taxman, by Elda Di Re and Scott Ferritti. I share a part of that article pertaining to a great taxing saving vehicle for this economy, the GRAT. If you get the chance you may want to read the entire article.

"In view of historically low interest rates, the current environment is an optimal time to give consideration to establishing a Grantor Retained Annuity Trust, "GRAT". A GRAT is a particularly attractive estate planning strategy due to the fact that the resulting gift tax cost can be eliminated.

The GRAT is an estate-freezing strategy that enables the business owner to transfer future appreciation in the business to children at a substantially reduced gift tax cost. Under the GRAT arrangement, the owner would transfer assets to an irrevocable trust and retain the right to receive a fixed annuity for a term of years. At the end of that term, the remaining assets in the GRAT would pass to the children.

The benefit of a GRAT is that, although all remaining assets would go to the owner’s children at the end of the term, the gift tax on the transfer to the GRAT is computed on the value of the remainder interest at the time of the transfer. The value of the remainder interest is computed by taking the original value of the transferred property and subtracting the present value of the annuity payments.

The owner receives annuity payments from the GRAT each year and may be established high enough so that the annuity's value approximates the value of the assets transferred into the trust, thereby reducing the gift tax cost to zero. The ability to "zero-out" the GRAT makes the GRAT an ideal estate planning tool."

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Thursday, June 4, 2009

Rethinking Your Estate Plan - Question 1. Part B.


This is a continuation of from yesterday. These questions were from an article I read in Money Magazine that I thought was very good and may also be of interest to you.

1. Part B. DOES YOUR STATE HAVE A DEATH TAX?
"How much will you need? If you're a 65-year-old retiree and want to withdraw an inflation-adjusted $60,000 a year from investments (in addition to whatever you'll get from pensions and Social Security), you should have roughly $1.5 million set aside for yourself. Okay, let's assume you have enough for your retirement needs but less than $3.5 million. Giving while you're alive may still make sense - and not just because your recession-hit kids may need help now.
For example, your state may levy its own estate tax that kicks in at a lower level than the federal one. Or you may want to hedge against the very real possibility that Congress will eventually lower the estate-tax exemption back to, say, $1 million, where it was as recently as 2003.

If you're going to give, now is an ideal time to make a present of assets that have been beaten down but could appreciate significantly in the future. Say you own stock in General Electric. The price at the October 2007 market peak was $38.40; today it's around $12. As a result, you can give three times as many shares without triggering a gift tax today as you could during the bull market."

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Monday, February 2, 2009

FIFTH of TEN Hot Estate Planning Topics


FIFTH, the annual gift tax exclusion amount has increased to $13,000 effective in 2009. This is the amount you can give to any person each year without it being considered a taxable gift. Gifts of the annual exclusion amount to children, grandchildren and other beneficiaries are often recommended as an excellent way to reduce your taxable estate. Everyone is always looking for ways to preserve and protect their assets. Through this exclusion amount and other estate planning tools, you can be on top of keeping what you have earned for those who matter most in your life.