Title: Estate Planning
1Estate Planning
2Estate planning
- Goals and objectives
- Reviewing current plan
- Passing property at death
- Probate
- Estate taxes (federal, state)
- Unification of estate and gift taxes
- Other transfer issues
- Life planning
3What are some common estate planning goals?
4Is your current plan effective?
- Asset inventory
- Comprehensive/up to date
- Accurate on ownership and title
- Reasons for review
- Change in financial position/goals
- Deaths of beneficiaries, executors, guardians
- Relocation
- Additions to family
- Changes in the law
- Need to ensure tax-effective transfers
- Need for estate liquidity
5Passing property at death
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
6Passing property at death
- By will
- Attorney assistance
- Witnesses
- Safeguarding
- Changing
- Letter of instructions
7Passing property at death
- Advantages of a will (vs. dying without one)
- Assets are distributed as desired
- Personal representative can be named
(executor/executrix/co-executors) - Potential guardians for children can be named
- Cost and time of probate can be minimized
- Trust can be established to protect and manage
assets (testamentary trust)
8Passing property at death
- Disadvantages of a will
- (vs. other property transfer methods)
- Wills do not provide for lifetime planning for
- Disability
- Your own guardianship
- Management of your assets while alive
- Assets are subject to probate
- Wills become public documents at death
- Review is needed if you move to another state or
laws change
9Passing property at death
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
10Passing property at death
- By contract
- Life insurance policies
- Annuities
- Individual retirement accounts (IRAs)
- Employee benefit plans
11Passing property at death
- By trust
- A legal device to transfer assets or property to
a trustee to manage for beneficiaries of the
trust - Involves
- Grantor
- Trustee
- Beneficiary
- Trust agreement (contract)
- Corpus (trust property)
12Passing property at death
- By trust
- A trust can
- Provide for professional management
- Make distributions to beneficiaries during the
lifetime of the grantor or at death - A trust can be
- Testamentary (bypass, QTIP)
- Living (revocable, irrevocable)
13Passing property at death
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
14Passing property at death
- By operation of law
- Passing property by title The built-in estate
plan - Joint tenancy with right of survivorship
- Community property
- Intestate death
- Dower/curtesy provisions
15Passing property at death
- Joint tenancy with right of survivorship
- Property is owned equally with others
- You can
- Give your interest in the property
- Sell your interest
- You cannot
- Pass your interest at death to others ? surviving
co-owners acquire your entire interest
16Passing property at death
- Community property
- Applies only in certain states and only to
married persons - Assets acquired during marriage are considered
equally owned (50/50) - Assets acquired prior to marriage or by
gift/inheritance during marriage remain separate
property - You can
- Give your interest in the property
- Sell your interest
- Pass your interest at death
17Passing property at death
- Intestate death (death without a will)
- Assets that would have passed under your will
pass by state law instead - Dower/curtesy provisions
- Surviving spouse may be entitled to a certain
percentage of the deceased spouses estate - To protect a spouse from being disinherited by
the other spouse
18Passing property at death
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
By will By contract or trust By operation of law
19Probate
- Functions of the probate process
- Appoint an administrator if no will
- Interpret the will
- Inventory and assess value of all property
- Locate and identify heirs
- Identify and settle outstanding loans and
liabilities - Complete and file tax returns
- Distribute all property
20Probate
- Disadvantages of probate
- Probate proceedings are public
- Probate can be costly
- Probate can prolong the settlement of an estate
- Heirs may be prevented from receiving their
inheritance in a timely fashion
21Federal estate tax
- Adjustments to gross estate
- Debts
- Probate/administrative expenses
- Funeral expenses
- Deductions from gross estate
- Unlimited marital deduction
- Unlimited charitable deduction
22Federal estate tax
- Life insurance and certain trusts
- Life insurance proceeds are included in your
taxable estate, but - Are excluded if you do not have an ownership
interest within three years before death - Are deducted if spouse is beneficiary (under the
unlimited marital deduction) - Assets must be transferred to an irrevocable
living trust at least three years before death
23Unification of estate and gift taxes
- The unified transfer credit
- First 2,000,000 (2006) is exempt from estate tax
- Future years
Year Exemption
2007 and 2008 2,000,000
2009 3,500,000
2010 No limit
2011 1,000,000
24State taxes at death
- The state gets its share
- Your state of residence, or domicile,
determines which state will tax - Three state approaches
- Gap-tax or state death tax credit
- Direct estate tax
- Inheritance tax
25Unification of estate and gift taxes
- Annual gift tax exclusion
- 12,000 (indexed) per year to as many individuals
as you wish - Gifts can be split both spouses exclusions are
used for a gift of property belonging to one of
them - Any gift tax is liability of donor
- Lifetime taxable gifts are added to estate at
death (unless you elect to pay it at time of gift)
26Other transfer issues
- Rules of cost basis ? death
- Property basis is stepped up to fair market
value on the date of death - At later sale, capital gain is measured from this
stepped-up basis - Rules of cost basis ? gifts
- Property basis for donee is basis held by donor
(assuming appreciated property) - At later sale, capital gain is measured from this
basis
27Life planning
- Powers of attorney
- General
- Specific
- Durable
- Springing
- Health care proxy
- Living will
28Click link below to continue...
- LAFP8 LIFADJST2006 2006 0817.ppt