NEW TAX ACT
DEMANDS CAREFUL SCRUTINY OF WILLS
11/01
The Tax Relief Act, while easing and eventually, perhaps,
eliminating estate taxes, requires a careful scrutiny of
your wills and other estate planning documents.
One of the big challenges for estate planning documents
in the wake of the new act involves the gradual increase in
the exemption amount for estate taxes. While this is good
news for those subject to estate tax, it could cause
unintended consequences if their wills are not written
properly. Here's how the tax changes may actually foil your
best-laid plans, and why you may need to have an attorney
revise the language of your wills and related documents.
First, a quick review of the changing exemption amounts
of the new tax act. The amount in estate value for each
person that will be exempt from federal estate taxes (but
not necessarily state estate taxes) jumps from $675,000 in
2001 to $1 million in 2002. In the coming years, that
exemption amount increases to $1.5 million, $2 million and
ultimately $3.5 million by 2009, certainly good news for
valuable estates.
But here's where the language of your will becomes so
critical. In most cases, a spouse simply leaves his or her
entire estate to the other spouse because the surviving
spouse inherits the assets estate-tax free. For families
with modest estates not likely to be subject to the estate
tax, this usually works fine. However, for larger estates,
passing all your assets to your surviving spouse can, in
essence, "waste" your exemption amount because it's not used
at the time, and it can't be used later. When the surviving
spouse dies, only his or her exemption amount can be
used.
A common way around this is to have your will create at
your death what's called a credit-shelter trust, or
sometimes referred to as a marital deduction trust or Part B
of an A/B trust. Typically, the language of the will directs
that the trust be funded by an amount equivalent to the
exemption amount. This makes maximum use of the exemption.
The arrangement usually calls for trust income to go to the
surviving spouse (if he or she needs it) and for trust
assets to go to the children or other heirs upon the death
of the surviving spouse.
For example, let's say you have an estate worth $3.5
million. If you died in 2001, $675,000 (the exemption
amount) would go into the trust and the remaining $2,825,000
would go to your spouse. When your spouse dies, his or her
personal exemption would shelter still more of the estate's
assets from taxes.
In our example, this strategy might work fine for the
moment, when the exemption amounts are still small. In 2002,
$1 million would go into the trust and your surviving spouse
would receive $2.5 million. But what happens in subsequent
years if the language of the will is left unchanged? For
example, if you die in 2009, the entire $3.5 million estate
(we're assuming no growth in the estate) would go into the
trust and your spouse would be left impoverished. You can
see that your estate assets may not go entirely where you
want them to assuming the exemption amounts increase as
scheduled in the coming years.
This same problem may occur if your estate plan calls for
using the generation-skipping exemption, which is used for
passing assets directly on to grandchildren. That exemption
amount, $1,060,000 in 2001, is also scheduled to rise to
$3.5 million by 2009. In that case, you could overfund your
grandchildren and leave children without enough money.
Alternative approaches to this dilemma include specifying
a dollar limit for funding the trust, or perhaps a
percentage cap, such as no more than 40 percent of the value
of the estate. The key is to have an attorney familiar with
the new act review your wills and trust documents to see
whether the standard formula language should be
redrafted.
This article was produced by the Consumer Affairs Dept.
of The Financial Planning Association and provided to you
courtesy of Nigel B. Taylor, CFP, Santa Monica, California.
If you have any questions or concerns regarding this, or any
other financial topic and are a resident of Southern
California, please call me at 1-800-444-2237 (California
residents only please), or click on the "MORE INFO" button
to arrange for a free initial consultation in the comfort of
your home or office.
  
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