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Overview
- Appreciation and Inflation:
Appreciation and inflation will increase estate taxes upon
death. As mentioned earlier, any estate-reducing program is
more effective if it includes techniques to shift
appreciation and income to a person's intended
beneficiaries.
- Estate "Freezing":
For years, estate planning professionals have developed and
implemented estate "freezing" techniques so that
the estate tax problem would not get worse. Many of the
freezing techniques involved creative structuring of
family-owned business entities so that the increasing value
of a growing business would shift to the next generation.
Some of those techniques were perceived as abusive by the
IRS, which persuaded Congress to adopt
"anti-freeze" legislation that made the freezing
techniques ineffectual. In spite of that, there are still
some effective techniques that can be used to shift
appreciation and to "freeze" the value of an asset
for estate-tax purposes.
Techniques Involving Asset Sales
- Installment Sales: By
selling an asset to family members on an installment basis,
the potential appreciation on the asset is shifted to the
family members. This works only if the purchase price is
"full and adequate consideration" and the
arrangement is properly documented in order to create a
legally enforceable obligation. Upon the death of the payee,
the unpaid balance of the note is included in his or her
taxable estate for estate tax purposes, but the asset that
was sold is out of the estate, including its appreciated
value. The installment note can be secured by the property
sold.
- Death Terminating Notes*:
Another version of the installment sale employs the use of
promissory notes that, by their express terms, expire upon
the death of the payee. This type of promissory note has the
same advantages as any installment note (including the
ability to require security), but in addition to shifting
appreciation, the unpaid balance of the note is reduced to
zero at death, and there is nothing included in the payee's
estate at death. As with any installment note, the purchase
price must reflect "full and adequate
consideration", but that also means the value of the
note must exceed the value of the property being sold.
Because the note may expire before the payee receives
payments equal to the note's face amount, an additional
"premium" must be paid for that feature so that
the value of the note is considered adequate to pay for the
property. Determining the amount of the "premium"
for the death-termination aspect is the primary drawback to
this technique. A qualified expert is strongly recommended
to make that determination.
*Note: "Death terminating
notes" are more often called "self-cancelling
installment notes" or "SCINs". The
"cancellation" of a debt can have adverse
income-tax consequences, so some commentators are advising
against the use of that term in the promissory note. This is
another example of where form becomes more important than
substance, but that is frequently the case when dealing with
the federal tax laws.
- Private Annuities: A
private annuity is a contract that provides for specified
payments to the named annuitant during the annuitant's
lifetime. This is similar to the death-terminating
promissory note, but under a private annuity, the payments
never cease so long as the annuitant is alive, even if the
annuitant outlives his or her life expectancy. The primary
advantage of the private annuity is the fact that the
annuity amount can be determined from the IRS valuation
tables, eliminating the guess work as to the amount of the
periodic payments to be made. Unlike promissory notes used
with installment sales, private annuities cannot be secured,
putting the annuitant at risk that the payor may become
bankrupt.
Retained-Interest Gifts
- Grantor Retained Interest
Trusts: Most people would like to "have their cake
and eat it, too." If possible, people would retain all
control and all benefits from an asset up to their death and
then have the value of the asset disappear for estate-tax
purposes. Unfortunately, federal gift and estate tax laws do
not permit this. The general rule is this: "If you
give away the tree, you cannot keep the fruit." If
you give away only part of the tree, you can keep the fruit
only from the part you retain.
- Over the years, various
trusts (or trust-like arrangements) been devised that
allow the grantor of the trust to retain benefits for a
specified period of years so that the present value of
the gift of the to children is reduced according to the
IRS' own valuation tables. The longer the
retained-interest period, the lower the value of the
remainder interest is. These trusts used to be called
"grantor retained income trusts" or "GRITs".
Congress has now limited the use of these techniques to
a very few specific types of trusts, which I will call
"grantor retained interest trusts" (so that we
can still talk about them as "GRITs").
- If the grantor of a
retained-interest trust dies before his or her benefits
are terminated under the trust's terms, the asset is
subject to estate taxes in his or her estate (and any
gift tax paid is credited toward the estate tax). On the
other hand, if the grantor outlives his or benefits
under the trust, the trust's assets are excluded, and
the only transfer-tax cost is the gift tax paid (or the
applicable exclusion applied) on the original value of
the remainder interest.
- While a GRIT can save
transfer taxes, there is at least one disadvantage: the
lost of the stepped-up basis for income tax purposes.
Assets included in a decedent's estate for estate-tax
purpose will (under current law) receive a "stepped
up" income tax basis equal to the fair market value
of the assets at the time of the decedent's death. In
other words, all potential capital gain is reduced to
zero. If a retained-interest trust is successful, the
asset will not be included in the grantor's estate at
the time of the grantor's death, so there will be no
stepped-up income tax basis; the recipient will have the
grantor's original cost basis.
- Qualified
Personal Residence Trusts (QPRTs): A "qualified
personal residence trust" or QPRT is a type of GRIT
that is still permitted under federal law. A grantor can
transfer his or her primary residence or even a qualifying
vacation home to the trustee of a QPRT that allows the
grantor to reside in the home for a designated period of
time. At the end of the designated period, the property
passes to designated remainder beneficiaries.
- The gift to the trust's
remainder beneficiaries is subject to the federal gift
tax, but the value of the gift is the present value of
the remainder interest, which is determined under the
IRS tables after taking into consideration the term of
the grantor's retained interest, the grantor's age, and
the applicable interest rate published by the IRS
monthly.
- If a home worth $500,000 is
transferred into a 10-year QPRT, and the remainder
interest has a value equal to 60% of the value of the
home, 40% of the value of the home escapes gift and
estate taxes altogether if the grantor outlives the term
of his retained interest. If the grantor's estate is in
the 50% tax bracket, this transaction saved $100,000 in
estate taxes (not to mention the estate tax on any
appreciation).
- If the grantor dies before
the retained-interest expires, the home is subject to
estate taxes, but since any gift taxes paid are credited
back, there is no true penalty. The cost of this gamble
is the cost of creating and administering the trust.
- One psychological drawback to
QPRTs is the fact that the grantor no longer has the
right to reside in the residence at the end of the term
of the grantor's retained interest. In order to remain
in the home, the grantor must make fair-market rental
payment (according to an agreement negotiated after the
term has expired). Of course, the rent paid by the
grantor is another good way to make an estate-reducing
transfer to the trust's beneficiaries. [The IRS
regulations currently prohibit the grantor from
purchasing the home before the expiration of the
retained-interest term.]
- There are a number of
technical rules for QPRTs. For example, there are rules
governing the possibility that a residence might be sold
and a substitute residence purchased. If a substitute
residence is not purchased within a specified time
limit, the trust must become a grantor retained annuity
trust (which is discussed below).
- Grantor Retained Annuity
Trusts (GRATs): Grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs)
are similar in structure to charitable remainder annuity
trusts. GRATs permit the gift of remainder interests that
are discounted for gift-tax purposes under the IRS valuation
tables. While longer terms produce lower remainder values,
even short-term GRATs can produce significant transfer-tax
savings.
- Grantor Retained Unitrusts (GRUTs):
Grantor retained unitrusts (GRUTs) are similar in structure
to charitable remainder unitrusts. GRUTs are similar to
GRATs in their general purpose, but GRUTs are not considered
as effective as GRATs where the trust's assets are expected
to appreciate.
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