Estate Taxes Can Bite You Bad after
the Year of Kevorkian
By Shane Flait © 2008
The estate tax is the government’s
last bite out of you when you die.
It’s a tax on the value of your
estate at your death. And it can be
a big bite.
Your estate is anything you own and
in which you had an interest at the
time of death. It may also include
the value of certain property you
transferred within 3 years before
your death.
A graduated
estate tax is imposed on the value
of your estate in excess of whatever
this year’s estate tax exclusion
level. The tax rate starts at 20%
and goes up fast! Paying estate tax
can destroy the nature of what you
own –such as a business – if you
don’t have the available cash to pay
it.
The 2001 Tax Act
broke apart the unified estate and
gift tax scheme and left us with a
confusing and unpredictable estate
tax arrangement that undermines long
term planning. The law produced a
graduated increase in the estate tax
exclusion levels and a reduction in
the maximum estate tax rates. In
fact the estate tax was repealed for
the year 2010 when no estate tax
would exist – a year often referred
to as the ‘Year of Kevorkian’.
The table shows
how much of your estate is excluded
from estate tax for the coming years
along with the highest rate of the
estate tax.
|
Year |
Highest Estate Tax Rate |
Estate Tax Exclusion Level |
|
2007-8 |
45% |
$2 million |
|
2009 |
45% |
$3.5 million |
|
2010 |
No Estate Tax |
No Estate Tax |
|
2011 |
Return to pre-2001 Tax Act
(55%) |
Return to pre-2001 Tax Act
($1 million) |
The increasing estate tax exclusion
levels through 2010 keep a lot of
Americans free from estate tax
without much planning. But if you
have or control a lot of wealth or a
business of substantial value, you
may want to take steps to either
forego ownership to reduce your
estate or buy life insurance to
handle estate taxes.
Even though the pre-2001 estate tax
is slated to go into effect in 2011,
it’s not clear whether congress will
alter this. It’s a disgrace that
congress can’t get the act together
so people can plan the estate at
least 10 years in advance.
Although the estate tax was designed
to grab some wealth from the very
wealthy, it’ll be digging into the
wealth transfer of the ‘average Joe
or Jane’ come 2011. That’s because
it won’t be hard to push beyond the
$1 million exclusion level then.
Many
estates will surpass it as house
values alone – these days - can eat
up half to all of it.
If you’re married
and die before your spouse, you can
leave all your wealth to her without
paying estate tax by using the
‘unlimited’ marital deduction from
your gross estate. Unfortunately,
that’ll leave her estate that much
bigger by the time she’s dies. And
then the wealth will be taxed before
going to your kids. You also miss
using the estate tax exclusion level
as it applies to your death.
Take advantage of
your estate tax exclusion level by
arranging to transfer at least that
exclusion level amount to a trust
with your kids as eventual
beneficiaries. Then give the rest
going to your spouse. You can even
let the trust help her out if she
needs money in those intervening
years before here death.
Learn about this
and other strategies to safeguard
your wealth for you and yours.
Shane
Flait is a writer and educator. See
more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com