Minimize Estate Tax Uncertainty: Update Your Estate Plan

With the estate tax in flux this year, you may want to revise your wills to make sure your bases are covered. If you have a will that leaves assets to a person based on an estate tax formula it may need revision. For instance, some wills leave assets to children based on an amount that can pass free of federal estate tax. If this is the case, in 2010, presumably all assets would pass to those children under this language. Such a scenario may leave little or nothing for a surviving spouse. Often this is not a person’s intent. Additionally, you may want to have language included to address an estate tax with a $1 million exemption limit or a higher limit, depending on what Congress does or does not do later this year.

You should also consider to whom your assets will pass and how they will be affected by the capital gains tax. If you are leaving more than $1.3 million to someone other than your spouse, you may want to make sure your executor knows how to allocate the step-up in basis, applicable to estates of persons dying in 2010. If the basis step-up won’t cover all such assets (so as to minimize future capital gains taxes on an asset’s sale), it may be wise to include language guiding the executor to allocate the basis step-up in a manner that minimizes the tax burden on all beneficiaries. Hopefully such language will reduce the potential for strife among family members.
 

Estate Tax Repeal and Washington State

On January 1, 2010, the federal estate tax was repealed. Currently, there is no federal estate tax. So, what does this mean for people in the State of Washington? It means several things. First, it means that if you die today, you may not owe any estate tax to the federal government; second, there is still an estate tax in Washington State that may apply; and, third your heirs may have to pay a substantial capital gains tax on property that is sold. Let’s look at each of these issues.

 

Federal Estate Tax

I say you may not owe federal estate tax because toward the end of 2009, Congress made a lot of noise about how they would simply bring the estate tax back in early 2010 and have it applied retroactively to January 1. So in actuality, if you die today and Congress creates a retroactive tax in May, you could still owe federal estate taxes.

If, however, Congress does nothing on the estate tax issue in 2010, the estate tax is automatically set to come roaring back in 2011. At that point, the estate tax exemption will be $1,000,000 per person as opposed to the $3,500,000 exemption in 2009. This means a lot more estates will owe taxes in 2011 than in 2009.

 

Washington State Estate Tax

Regardless of what happens with the federal estate tax, Washington still has its own estate tax. Here, the estate tax exemption is $2 million per person. So anyone with an estate in excess of that amount would owe estate tax to Washington State. Proper planning can minimize or even eliminate this tax in certain situations.

 

Capital Gains Tax

There is another wrinkle with estate tax repeal. This year, without the estate tax, you can only receive an increased tax basis on $1,300,000 worth of your property. What does that mean? Well, under the old estate tax laws, when a person died the tax basis in his or her property would increase from the amount paid for the item to the market value of the item at the time of death. But this is not the case in 2010. Now only $1.3 million of your property will qualify (with an additional $3 million exemption for property passing from one spouse to the other). If you have property worth more than that, a capital gain will be incurred on the sale of the asset, and that gain will be based on the original cost of the item.

Here’s an example under both the old and new systems: mom has $1.3 million in her retirement account; mom bought her house in 1980 for $50,000. Mom dies in 2009 and the house was worth $350,000. The tax basis increased from $50,000 to $350,000 and her heirs would owe no capital gains tax on the sale of the house in addition to having no estate tax to either the federal or Washington State governments.

Now let’s say mom died on January 1, 2010. If mom’s retirement account eats up her $1.3 million capital gain “exemption” then capital gain will be due on the sale of the house. The tax will be based on $300,000, the difference between the $50,000 original tax basis and $350,000, the current value of the property.

What will happen to the capital gains tax issue if the estate tax is reinstated retroactively? Presumably, it will go away. Confused? To deal with this mess I (with tongue in cheek) told one client earlier this week – “Don’t die in 2010!”