Let Me Tell You About The Rich; They Live Very Differently From You And Me When It Comes To Estate Taxes

If there is one absolute certainty in life, it is one day all of us will have our last day.  The unfortunate reality is that death does not just come calling for the aged and infirm. Every day in the United States thousands of people die from causes that are not natural, such as auto accidents, accidental poisoning (mostly drug and alcohol related), falls, drowning, boating and aircraft accidents, and even animal attacks.  Some years ago, not far from this author’s home in Southern California a jogger was killed by a mountain lion.  Not long after this incident, another runner was killed by an alligator in Florida.  In fact, Florida seems to have more than its share of gruesome unnatural deaths.  In 2013, Jeffrey Bush, a 37-year-old resident of Hillsborough County, Florida, was at home in bed, and a giant sinkhole swallowed the entire house—with him in it.  They never found the body.

In the vast majority of cases involving sudden deaths, Federal Estate Tax is not an issue due to the current $11.70[1] Million Estate Tax exemption (as of the date of this writing) that is granted to each natural person[2].  Most people do not have estates that come anywhere near this amount.  But what of the ultra-wealthy?  Those 1/10 of one percent who fly through rarified air at 40,000 feet in their private Gulfstream and Lear Jets and take their summers in the Hamptons?  What happens when they make their final exit without the chance to say goodbye?  At least as far as Federal Estate Taxes are concerned the answer may be—not much.  On the other hand, it may be—quite a lot. Which answer applies to any particular case depends on the quality and quantity of the estate planning done by the recently departed.

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