19 Feb 2011 @ 7:50 PM 
Thanks for your com­ment Court­ney. Much appre­ci­ated. Saw your arti­cles in Google con­cern­ing Porta­bil­ity. Just won­der if you are aware of the fact that if one elects Porta­bil­ity I am told that they lose stepped-up val­u­a­tion, can­not do an A/B split, and must file the dreaded IRS Form 706. On the other hand if they do not elect Porta­bil­ity, they can do the A/B split, and do not have to file the 706. B. Court­ney Swan­son, Swan­son & Asso­ciates, Inc. csbcswanson@gmail.com Cell: 509 – 998-9838 Fax: 509 – 927-0167
Estate Tax Exemp­tion Is Portable (For Now) Intro­duc­tion Recent leg­is­la­tion intro­duced a new, but per­haps tem­po­rary, estate plan­ning con­cept – exemp­tion “porta­bil­ity.” In short, the estate of a deceased spouse can trans­fer to the sur­viv­ing spouse any por­tion of the fed­eral estate tax exemp­tion that it does not use. The sur­viv­ing spouse’s estate can then add that amount to the exemp­tion it is enti­tled to, increas­ing the total amount that can be passed on to heirs tax free. This new fea­ture makes it eas­ier for mar­ried cou­ples to min­i­mize the poten­tial impact of estate taxes.

The fed­eral estate tax exemp­tion defined The fed­eral gov­ern­ment imposes a tax on the value of your prop­erty when you pass it along to your descen­dants at your death. Any amount that is passed to a sur­viv­ing spouse is gen­er­ally fully deductible. The estate is also allowed to exclude a cer­tain amount that passes on to non­spouse ben­e­fi­cia­ries. That amount is called the “basic exclu­sion amount,” which is $5 mil­lion in 2011. How the exemp­tion works for mar­ried cou­ples Prior to the new tax law, if a spouse died with­out hav­ing planned for his or her exemp­tion, the deceased spouse’s estate would have passed tax free to the sur­viv­ing spouse under the unlim­ited mar­i­tal deduc­tion (assum­ing all assets passed to the sur­viv­ing spouse), and the deceased spouse’s exemp­tion was lost or “wasted.” The sur­viv­ing spouse’s estate could then only trans­fer an amount equal to his or her own exemp­tion free from fed­eral estate tax. To solve this dilemma, mar­ried cou­ples typ­i­cally set up what is com­monly referred to as a credit shel­ter trust (aka “bypass” or fam­ily trust) that shel­tered or pre­served the exemp­tion of the first spouse to die. The fol­low­ing exam­ple illus­trates how porta­bil­ity can achieve a sim­i­lar result with­out the use of a credit shel­ter trust. Exam­ple: Result with­out porta­bil­ity Assume Henry and Wilma are mar­ried, have all of their assets jointly titled, and have a net worth of $10 mil­lion. Henry dies first, when the fed­eral estate tax exemp­tion is $5 mil­lion and there is no porta­bil­ity. Henry’s estate passes to Wilma free from fed­eral estate tax under the unlim­ited mar­i­tal deduc­tion and does not use any of his $5 mil­lion exemp­tion. Assume that at the time of Wilma’s death, the exemp­tion is still $5 mil­lion, the fed­eral estate tax rate is 35%, and Wilma’s estate is still worth $10 mil­lion. With Henry’s exemp­tion com­pletely wasted, Wilma can pass on only $5 mil­lion free from fed­eral estate tax. Assum­ing no other vari­ables, Wilma’s estate will owe about $1,750,000 in fed­eral estate tax: $10 mil­lion estate — $5 mil­lion exemp­tion = $5 mil­lion tax­able estate x 35% estate tax rate = $1,750,000. Exam­ple: Result with porta­bil­ity Assume Henry and Wilma are mar­ried, have all of their assets jointly titled, and have a net worth of $10 mil­lion. Henry dies first, when the fed­eral estate tax exemp­tion is $5 mil­lion and there is porta­bil­ity. As above, Henry’s estate passes to Wilma free from fed­eral estate tax under the unlim­ited mar­i­tal deduc­tion and does not use any of his $5 mil­lion exemp­tion. Even though Henry’s estate owes no tax, Henry’s execu­tor files a timely return on which he elects to trans­fer Henry’s unused exemp­tion to Wilma. Assume that at the time of Wilma’s sub­se­quent death the exemp­tion is still $5 mil­lion, the fed­eral estate tax rate is 35%, and Wilma’s estate is still worth $10 mil­lion. Since Wilma has “inher­ited” Henry’s unused exemp­tion, she can pass on the entire $10 mil­lion estate free from fed­eral estate tax. Porta­bil­ity of the estate tax exemp­tion saves Henry and Wilma’s heirs $1,750,000 in estate tax. Porta­bil­ity does not elim­i­nate the ben­e­fits of credit shel­ter trusts Even with porta­bil­ity, there are still tax and non­tax con­sid­er­a­tions that may lead you to use a credit shel­ter trust, such as:
  • The porta­bil­ity fea­ture is in effect for only two years and will expire after 2012, unless Con­gress enacts fur­ther legislation.
  • The trust can help pro­tect assets against cred­i­tors of the sur­viv­ing spouse or future ben­e­fi­cia­ries (typ­i­cally chil­dren and grandchildren).
  • The trust gives the first spouse to die con­trol over the ulti­mate dis­tri­b­u­tion of his or her assets. For exam­ple, in a sec­ond mar­riage sit­u­a­tion, one spouse may wish to ensure that any assets remain­ing after his or her spouse’s death pass to his or her chil­dren from a pre­vi­ous marriage.
  • Appre­ci­a­tion of assets placed in the trust will escape estate tax­a­tion in the survivor’s estate.
  • The porta­bil­ity fea­ture applies only to estate tax; it does not apply to the generation-skipping trans­fer (GST) tax. With­out a trust, any unused GST tax exemp­tion of the first spouse to die will be lost.
Some tech­ni­cal infor­ma­tion To use the exemp­tion porta­bil­ity, the first spouse to die must elect to use porta­bil­ity on his or her estate tax return. An estate tax return must be filed by the first spouse to die to use porta­bil­ity even if the return is not oth­er­wise required to be filed. Many states have state estate tax exemp­tions that are less than the fed­eral estate tax exemp­tion. So, while your sur­viv­ing spouse might not be sub­ject to fed­eral estate tax upon your pass­ing, your sur­viv­ing spouse may have to pay state estate tax if you rely solely on the fed­eral exemp­tion porta­bil­ity. Exemp­tion porta­bil­ity is avail­able only from the last deceased spouse. It will be lost if the sur­viv­ing spouse remar­ries and is wid­owed again. In other words, if the sur­viv­ing spouse sur­vives spouse 1, the sur­viv­ing spouse can use spouse 1’s unused exemp­tion even if the sur­viv­ing spouse mar­ries spouse 2. How­ever, if spouse 2 also pre­de­ceases the sur­viv­ing spouse, the exemp­tion of spouse 1 can no longer be used. How­ever, the sur­viv­ing spouse can then use the unused exemp­tion of spouse 2.
Refer a friend To find out more click here
Fore­field Inc. does not pro­vide legal, tax, or invest­ment advice. All con­tent pro­vided by Fore­field is pro­tected by copy­right. Fore­field is not respon­si­ble for any mod­i­fi­ca­tions made to its mate­ri­als, or for the accu­racy of infor­ma­tion pro­vided by other sources.
Pre­pared by Fore­field Inc. Copy­right 2011.
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Posted By: Jennifer
Last Edit: 28 May 2011 @ 06:33 AM

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