8 ESTATE PLANNING
STRATEGIES YOU SHOULD KNOW
05/02
Despite the scheduled repeal of estate taxes by 2010 (and
scheduled to reappear in 2011), many estate planning
strategies, including tax reduction strategies, are still
needed. Here are eight estate-planning strategies you should
know.
1. A will.: A valid will stipulates to whom you
want your assets distributed. Without a will, the laws of
the state where you reside will determine for you.
2. A living will, medical power of attorney and
financial power of attorney.: A living will stipulates
what life-saving medical procedures you want or don't want
in the event you are physically or mentally incapacitated. A
medical power of attorney appoints a person the power to
make medical decisions on your behalf, while a financial
power of attorney states who can make financial decisions on
your behalf.
3. The annual gift-tax exclusion.: One of the most
basic and inexpensive strategies for saving estate taxes,
the gift-tax exclusion allows you to give away, tax free,
$11,000 a year (indexed for inflation) to each beneficiary
you choose. Thus, you and your spouse could jointly give
away $22,000 annually to each of your children,
grandchildren or anyone else without incurring a gift
tax.
4. Medial and tuition payments.: A person can make
unlimited gift-tax-free payments for another's tuition or
medical bills without it counting against the payer's
lifetime gift-tax exclusion, as long as the payments are
made directly to the educational or medical institution. A
grandparent, for example, could pay a $20,000 annual tuition
bill to a college for a grandchild gift-tax free, and then
give directly to the child up to another $11,000 a year for
non-tuition college expenses, taking advantage of the annual
gift-tax exclusion.
5. Lifetime giving.: Assuming you have sufficient
funds to live on, lifetime gifting often can better reduce
your estate tax liability than waiting until death to pass
on your estate. One advantage of lifetime gifting is that
you can remove appreciating assets, such as common stock,
from your estate. The second advantage is that if your gift
is taxable (you can give away up to $1 million gift-tax free
during your lifetime), the money you use to pay the gift tax
is also removed from your estate, thus reducing any future
estate taxes.
6. By-pass trust or credit-shelter trusts.: For
people who die in 2002 or 2003, the first $1 million of
their estate is exempt from estate tax (assuming they
haven't used up some or all of their exemption amount
through taxable lifetime gifts). That exemption amount
gradually rises to $3.5 million by 2009. A spouse (with the
exception of a foreign-citizen spouse) can pass his or her
entire estate tax free to the surviving spouse. But because
the surviving spouse can't take use the deceased's exemption
amount at his or her subsequent death, this "wastes" the
deceased's exemption amount.
Often it's better for the first-to-die spouse to pass his
or her exemption amount to a credit shelter trust. The
surviving spouse can use income generated by the trust
assets, and at the survivor's death, the assets pass to the
trust's beneficiaries tax free. In addition, the estate of
the second spouse also saves the additional exemption
amount. Thus, for example, if both spouses died in 2003,
they could exempt $2 million between them instead of only $1
million.
7. Irrevocable life insurance trust.: The proceeds
of a life insurance policy held in your estate, perhaps used
to pay for estate taxes, is subject to estate tax. But if an
irrevocable life insurance trust owns the policy, the
proceeds will not be included in your estate. You may donate
annually to the trust an amount equal to the premiums to pay
for the policy. For these donations to qualify for the
annual gift-tax exclusion, you must use a complicated
strategy called Crummey letters.
8. Charitable remainder trust.: The donor
transfers property to the CRT, receiving an immediate
income-tax deduction and avoiding any capital gains taxes on
donated appreciated property. In return, the donor receives
an income stream generated by the trust assets either for a
specified time or for life. At the end of that period, the
charitable organization inherits the trust assets.
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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