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BULLETIN: 2010 TAX MESS REQUIRES ACTION NOW! What a mess Congress has created! We are now in a year where there is no federal estate tax - but hold the cheers. Congress has substituted another method of taxation that will collect more taxes from many of our clients & families than the estate tax! Additionally, as has been reported in the press, these changes will, for some, greatly alter the planned for & anticipated distributions among loved ones. A brief review of the law will help explain why this is so significant. The 2001 tax act gradually reduced the maximum rate of the federal estate tax (and the equally onerous generation-skipping transfer tax on transfers to grandchildren) from 55% to 45%. It also gradually increased the amount of property that you could pass free of federal estate tax from $675,000 per person in 2001 to $3.5 million per person in 2009. This means that with “basic” estate planning, a married couple could pass up to $7 million free of federal estate tax, if they both died in 2009. Then, in 2010 only, the 2001 tax act repeals the estate tax. But like a horror film character who just won’t die, under the existing law the estate tax returns again on January 1, 2011 – only at a much lower $1 million exemption and a higher maximum 55% tax rate! This strange “now it’s gone, no it isn’t” effect is the result of a rule in Congress that attempts to limit budget deficits. Paying for Estate Tax Repeal To pay for this one-year vacation from the estate tax, Congress replaced the estate tax with an increased income tax. Before 2010, any assets that pass to someone when you die would be valued at fair market value at the date of death. Thus after death, when a surviving spouse or heirs sold any assets (like securities or a home) that had increased in value, they would not have to pay income tax on any of that growth that occurred during your life. (This is referred to as a “step-up in basis.”) For many heirs this means huge income tax savings, often tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars or more. But in 2010 property that passes at death does not automatically receive this step-up in basis. Instead, each individual has a limited amount of property that can be “stepped-up” in value at the time of death. Property that does not receive this step-up value will be subject to tax on all increase in value from the date you first acquired the property. This means that the property could be exposed to tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars or more of income tax liability for your heirs! |
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