The Florida Estate Planning and Probate Law Blog is focused on recent federal and state case law and planning ideas.

Showing posts with label inheritance planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inheritance planning. Show all posts

HOPING FOR AN INHERITANCE? YOU MAY NOT GET AS MUCH AS YOU EXPECT

Everyone should be grateful to receive an inheritance, and no parent wants to leave their offspring with nothing. But just 21 percent of those who plan to bequeath money to their children tell them how much money they'll get. When kids do find out the size of their inheritance after a loved one passes away, it's often less then expected. It can add an unwanted feeling—disappointment—into an already-volatile emotional stew. More than half of 2,700 adults surveyed for Ameriprise Financial late last year expect to get an inheritance of more than $100,000. Among those who had already received an inheritance, about the same percentage (52 percent) got less than $100,000. The survey focused on Americans between the ages of 25 and 70 with at least $25,000 in assets. Some 83 percent plan to leave money to loved ones. If those heirs have unrealistic expectations, it can lead to family tension later, said Marcy Keckler, vice president for financial advice strategy at Ameriprise. Half of the boomers surveyed plan to leave at least $500,000 to their kids. Forty-seven percent of Gen Xers and 33 percent of millennials wanted to leave that much as well. While the survey found that the majority of those who had already inherited got less than $100,000, perhaps the portfolios of those benefactors hadn't lived through an eight-year bull market. Family conflicts often arise when money mixes with grief. Almost a quarter of those surveyed expect family members will have disagreements after they learn the terms of the will. That proved true for 25 percent of those in the survey who were left money.For parents, sometimes the issue is whether to leave amounts to children that are fair, or that are equal. That can become an issue if one child is wildly successful, while another struggles financially. There's no way to eliminate these conflicts, but you can minimize them, said Eric Reich, a certified financial planner with Reich Asset Management in Marmora, N.J. His clients create what's called an "ethical will," which is a letter, document, or video that explains to kids why their parents divided assets the way they did.Addressing potential conflicts while everyone is still alive is an even better strategy. Reich asks parents to get feedback from their children on what each one really wants from the estate. Usually "it's not money, but items of sentimental and/or intrinsic value," he said. "Most often the things that a particular child values most, the parents had no idea they even wanted to inherit." Jewelry usually causes the most problems, Reich said, especially pieces that have been passed down generations. And siblings can hold grudges for a long time. "I've actually seen two very close siblings who have not spoken for the past 15 years over a piece of furniture, an antique breakfront cabinet valued at $10,000 in an estate valued at $3 million," he said. It may be less anxiety-inducing if parents give children an estimation of what they hope to leave them. "I recommend parents give children some frame of reference," said Keckler. By setting proper expectations, the inheritance will be "less of a source of tension later," she said. Beloved animals may also receive money if an owner dies. Some 5 percent of the people surveyed said they wanted to leave money behind for care of a pet. Whatever the intent, few will match what is perhaps the largest inheritance left to a pet ever: $12 million, from New York hotel heiress Leona Helmsley to her maltese, Trouble. She left her two grandsons out of the will. This article was provided by Bloomberg News.

EVEN THE WEALTHY FAIL TO UPDATE THEIR ESTATE PLANNING DOCUMENTS

In a 2016 study, 26% out of 3,105 wealthy individuals surveyed had a complete estate-planning strategy to transfer their wealth to the next generation. Further, only 54% had created a will, but most had not updated them. As a result, $1.5 trillion of the $3.2 trillion is without direction as it falls into the hands of the next generation. Perhaps, the reason why people avoid preparing an estate plan is because they are not sure what they want to do with their wealth at some distant point in the future and a clearer picture of what heirs should receive will present itself at a later date. Another part of a solid estate plan is to communicate important facts so that the heirs are able to prepare for an inheritance. The sooner in life these conversations are expressed, the smoother the wealth transfers. Don’t Delay Planning Your Estate, Barron’s, February 10, 2017.

NEW MICHIGAN LAW ALLOWS FOR THE CREATION OF DOMESTIC ASSET PROTECTION TRUSTS

On December 5, 2016, the State of Michigan joined the ranks as one of seventeen states (including Alaska, Delaware, Nevada, Utah and South Dakota) that permit the use of irrevocable self-settled asset protection trusts for purposes of creditor protection planning. The law becomes effective on February 5, 2017. A Michigan domestic asset protection trust ("DAPT") will enable an individual to shelter assets from future third party creditors. A DAPT is an irrevocable self-settled trust which, when established and funded properly, allows the grantor (the individual establishing the trust) to protect his or her property from the claims of future third party creditors and still maintain a beneficial interest in the trust property. The majority of DAPTs are administered by an independent Trustee (usually a corporate Trustee), friend or family member who is domiciled or has a business presence in the jurisdiction in which the DAPT is established. The Trustee will have the absolute discretion to make distributions to a class of beneficiaries, which may include the grantor. A DAPT can be a highly effective creditor protection tool.

SPOUSAL LIFETIME ACCESS TRUSTS

Is a Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT) part of your estate plan? Many families today, for both Florida estate planning and Florida estate protection planning purposes, are utilizing SLAT’s to protect their assets. When both spouses are living, one spouse can establish this type of trust for the other spouse through the use of their lifetime gift tax exemption. A SLAT will typically name the non-gifting spouse as the beneficiary, and allow the trustee to make distributions to them during their lifetime. Upon the non-gifting spouse’s death, the trust assets can then pass to the designated trust beneficiary(s) under the specified terms and conditions of the instrument. For estate planning purposes, the non-gifting spouse can be given a limited power of appointment, effective at their death, which allows them to change how the SLAT assets will be distributed after the beneficiary-spouse’s death. This effectively gives them the ability to change the trust beneficiary(s) and the specified terms and conditions of the instrument. To maximize the asset protection benefits available with a SLAT, the gifting spouse should fund the trust using only their personal assets and not jointly held assets. The non-gifting spouse should only serve as a trustee if the power to make distributions to themselves is limited by an “ascertainable standard” (distributions can only be made for health, education, maintenance, and support). Under no condition should the gifting spouse serve as a trustee of the SLAT.

HILLARY CLINTON PROPOSES 65% TOP RATE FOR ESTATE TAX

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton would levy a 65% tax on the largest estates and make it harder for wealthy people to pass appreciated assets to their heirs without paying taxes, expanding the list of tax increases she would impose on the top sliver of America’s affluent. The estate-tax increase and other new proposals that Mrs. Clinton detailed on Thursday would generate $260 billion over the next decade, enough to pay for her plans to simplify small business taxes and expand the child tax credit, according to the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which advocates fiscal restraint. In all, Mrs. Clinton would increase taxes by about $1.5 trillion over the next decade, increasing federal revenue by about 4%, though that new burden would be concentrated on relatively few households. There is at least a $6 trillion gap between her plan and the tax cuts proposed by her Republican rival Donald Trump. The Clinton campaign changed its previous plan—which called for a 45% top rate—by adding three new tax brackets and adopting the structure proposed by Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont during the Democratic primaries. She would impose a 50% rate that would apply to estates over $10 million a person, a 55% rate that starts at $50 million a person, and the top rate of 65%, which would affect only those with assets exceeding $500 million for a single person and $1 billion for married couples. In 2014, just 223 estates with a gross value exceeding $50 million filed taxable estate-tax returns, according to the Internal Revenue Service. In a statement, Mr. Sanders said the proposal would respond to the “grotesque level of wealth” concentrated among the top few households. “Secretary Clinton understands that it is appropriate to ask the top three-tenths of 1%, the very wealthiest people in this country, to pay their fair share of taxes so that we can provide a child tax credit for millions of working families and lower taxes for small businesses,” Mr. Sanders said. The 65% estate-tax rate would be the highest since 1981 and marks one of the most enormous tax-policy gulfs between Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Trump, who would repeal the tax. “It is the height of hypocrisy for Hillary Clinton to offer an even more dramatic hike in the death tax at the same time she uses exotic tax loopholes reserved for the very wealthy to exempt her Chappaqua estate,” said Jason Miller, a spokesman for Mr. Trump, referring to Mrs. Clinton’s use of residence trusts in New York to lower the value of her taxable estate. Neither Mrs. Clinton’s nor Mr. Trump’s proposals stand much chance of succeeding in a divided Congress where Republicans control the House and Democrats can block action in the Senate. The current top rate of 40% was set as part of a bipartisan compromise in January 2013, and the first $5.45 million a person is exempt from tax. Mrs. Clinton’s plan is “dead on arrival,” said Rep. Kevin Brady (R., Texas), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. “It will stop family owned businesses—including women and minority-owned businesses—from being passed down to their children and grandchildren,” he said. The estate tax is “wildly unpopular” with small business owners, said Matt Turkstra, who works on the issue for the National Federation of Independent Business, and “the biggest transfer of wealth is going to be from very, very wealthy people to lawyers.” The shrunken version of the estate and gift tax that has been in place in recent years brings in relatively little money for the federal government, less than 1% of projected revenue over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Still, the tax carries symbolic and political weight. Republicans and their allies in the business world see it as a patently unfair confiscation of wealth that punishes family-owned businesses. Democrats see it as a leveling tool necessary to combat the increasing concentration of wealth, and say that the impact would largely be felt by a very small number of people. “The people who care a lot about it are the ones who are subject to it or the ones who benefit from it,” said Michael Graetz, a tax-law professor at Columbia University and co-author of a book on the politics of the estate tax. That includes charities, he said, which worry that a repeal of the tax would reduce charitable bequests. Mrs. Clinton would also repeal what is known as the step-up in basis. Under that rule, people who die with appreciated assets—for example, a stock bought decades ago—don’t have to pay the capital-gains taxes on the increase in value before death. Then, their heirs only have to pay taxes when they sell the assets and only have to pay capital-gains taxes on the difference between the sale price and the value when they were inherited. Under Mrs. Clinton’s plan and under a proposal from President Barack Obama that has gone nowhere in Congress, a bequest of an asset would be treated as realizing those pent-up gains. There would be an exemption of undetermined size that would focus the tax on high-income families, and Mrs. Clinton’s proposal, the campaign said, would include “careful protections and flexibility for small and closely held businesses, farms and homes, and personal property and family heirlooms.” But the combination of the 65% estate tax and the change to capital-gains rules could lead to significant increases in effective tax rates at death on some people—including, for example, Mr. Trump, who claims a net worth of $10 billion, though independent estimates put it lower. Mrs. Clinton’s new proposals would also limit like-kind exchanges, the technique commonly used in real estate to defer capital gains when properties are sold. The latest changes are part of a series of tax increases Mrs. Clinton has rolled out to pay for targeted tax cuts and for increased spending. She would impose a 4% surcharge on income over $5 million a year, limit deductions for high-income households, create higher capital-gains rates on assets held for between two and six years and require the “Buffett Rule,” a minimum 30% tax rate for the highest-income households named for investor Warren Buffett. “These proposals reflect Hillary Clinton’s approach to growing our economy: making investments in good-paying jobs and the middle class, paid for by closing loopholes and asking the wealthiest to pay their fair share—even as Donald Trump wants to give trillions in tax breaks tilted towards the wealthy,” said Mike Shapiro, an economic policy adviser to Mrs. Clinton. Article courtesy of the Wall Street Journal Sept. 22, 2016

FLORIDA ESTATE PLANNING CONSIDERATIONS WITH LARGE INHERITANCES

Receiving a large inheritance can be an unexpected windfall or curse to a beneficiary. To avoid a negative outcome, it is not uncommon for individuals to evaluate alternative methods to transfer wealth to their beneficiaries. A recent survey found that only thirty-two (32%) percent of baby boomers are confident their beneficiaries are prepared both emotionally and financially to receive an inheritance. Their concern stems from the desire for their beneficiaries to learn about hard work, failure and the joys of success and concern over their ability to handle sudden wealth. In making these decisions, individuals must also be concerned with: (i) the relationships of their beneficiaries (family harmony, divorces, current spouse’s and in-laws); (ii) student loan debt; (iii) establishing a 529 Education Plan for children or grandchildren; (iv) medical issues and a special needs trust; and (v) a drug or gambling problem or other destructive addictions. It is important to consider whether you want a beneficiary to receive their inheritance in one lump sum or distributions spread out over multiple years. All of these issues and more can be addressed in a well-designed estate plan.