Even though Estate Tax Planning is currently utilized by only high net worth individuals, historic trends have shown that the risk of a person’s estate being subject to the estate tax may be applicable to also those individuals with more modest estates. If the federal estate taxes are owed at a person’s death, the then dead individual (“decedent”) has considerably less money to pass to his or her heirs, given that nearly half of the taxable amount may be taxed. There are available avenues that may lessen the value of a person’s estate by the time of death and potentially escape the estate taxes altogether.
Estate taxes are determined by the Basic Exclusion Amount (“BEA”) that is in effect at the time of the person’s death. The way the IRS calculates estate taxes is it tallies up the total value of the estate, then determines whether any gifts were made in any particular year that may have exceeded the Annual Exclusion Amount (“AEA”) and arrives at the final figure of the amount of tax owed. Both the BEA and AEA are indexed with inflation.
In 2000, BEA was $675,000. In 2002, BEA was $1,000,000. In 2010, BEA was $5,000,000. Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (“TCJA”), BEA is now $10,000,000 if the person dies or makes gifts that exceed the AEA between 2017 and 2025. On January 1, 2026, the rates are going back to $5,000,000 (adjusted for inflation) unless Congress retains the current rates.
Taxation of an Estate
In 2019, the lifetime gift and estate tax exemption amount is $11,400,000 ($22,800,000 for married couples). Thus, if a person makes gifts that exceed the AEA for the particular year and the BEA amount is also exceeded, gift tax may be owed to the IRS. For example, if Byron makes a gift to his son Jacob in 2019 in the amount of $13,000,000, the first $15,000 will be exempt because of the AEA, the next $11,400,000 will be exempt because of the BEA, the remaining $1,585,000 will be taxed at 40%. Thus, Byron would owe $634,000 in gift tax to the IRS.
If a person dies, but gifts were made during his or her life that had exceeded the AEA in a particular year, then the IRS then determines if there will be any estate tax owed as determined by the BEA at the time of the person’s death and the BEA at the time the gift was made. If we change Byron’s facts slightly and assume that Byron died in 2019, Byron’s estate would owe $634,000 in estate tax to the IRS.
Golden Planning Opportunity
There is a significant likelihood that the estate and gift tax exemption amount (otherwise known as the “unified tax credit”) can be lower than $5,000,000 (indexed with inflation), which was the amount of the exemption before TCJA went into effect. The political climate and the oscillation of power between the Democrats and Republicans may very well yield this result. The higher exemption amounts under TCJA provides a golden planning tool for people with large estates to use this seven-year (now six-year) window of opportunity to shift as much money as possible out of their estate in order to potentially not pay any gift or estate tax after 2025 or even earlier if legislative changes are made.
The IRS specifically allowed this planning tool to be implemented in the Proposed Regulations that are to be adopted on March 13, 2019. The IRS did not deviate from the general rule, which states that the calculation of the gift tax or estate tax is generally determined by the exemption amount in the year in which the gift was made or the year of the taxpayer’s death. In the Proposed Regulations, the IRS addressed four specific situations which addressed the treatment of the higher rates on pre-2018 gifts and post-2025 deaths.
The first and second scenarios consider a person who paid tax on a pre-2018 gift and whether the IRS can apply the already taxed amount to the increased BEA period, resulting in a decreased BEA for the taxpayer. The IRS found that if the increased BEA period was not available at the time the gift was made, the gift will not reduce the increased BEA. Similarly, the tax that was paid on the pre-2018 gift will not affect the estate tax exemption amount by resulting in a decreased BEA. The third and fourth scenarios consider a person who made a gift during the increased BEA period and whether the gift may affect any post-2025 gift tax or estate tax calculations.
The IRS conclusively takes the position that the benefits of the increased BEA cannot be retroactively eliminated. In essence, the statutory provisions permit the person to make gifts during the increased BEA period and not pay gift tax after 2025 and effectively prevent the estate from having a tax liability on a post-2025 death (assuming that the rates of the unified tax credit will be lower after 2025). Therefore, a person may use the current BEA amount of $11,400,000 to transfer as much assets as possible out of his or her estate without being retroactively punished for it after 2025.
Have questions about estate planning? Contact Haik Chilingaryan
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