Robert A. Imparato, Jr CFP®

CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional

 

Craig A. Hyldahl CFP®

CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional

 

R.I.C.H. Planning Group, LLC

105 Fieldcrest Avenue, Suite #507

Edison, NJ 08837

 

Robert: 732-326-5240

Craig:   732-326-5240

Fax:     732-326-5331

 

Robert: robert@richplanninggroup.com

Craig: craig@richplanninggroup.com

Website: www.richplanninggroup.com

July/August 2018

Protect that Exclusion

Protect that Exclusion

While Congress doubled the federal estate tax exemption with the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, a couple who files taxes jointly can still lose a portion of the exclusion if they don’t create a strategy to maximize the full amount. A credit shelter trust, also known as a bypass trust or AB trust, is one such strategy.


The Background
Congress has long debated reducing federal estate taxes, with proponents of the change arguing that estate taxes affect owners of small businesses most, as their assets may be valued highly but are mostly illiquid. These firms with little cash, but with significant illiquid assets, would need to find the cash to pay estate taxes elsewhere or liquidate their firms. This is a painful reality for some family businesses.


Taxes Still Matter
Ultimately, the federal estate tax exemption was doubled to $11.18 million per individual and $22.36 million per couple, indexed to inflation. (This provision expires in 2025.) But one thing that hasn’t changed is the potential for couples to lose half of their estate tax exemption should one of them die. That’s where a credit shelter trust can come into play.


How It Works
A credit shelter trust protects the full exemptions of both spouses. You would work with a professional to create the trust and include the trust’s terms in your will. It’s revocable until the death of one spouse, whose estate assets are transferred to the trust and therefore don’t inflate the surviving spouse’s estate, which could place them over the individual exemption limit. Then the trust becomes irrevocable.


The trust typically allows the surviving spouse to access the trust’s income and even principal. When the surviving spouse dies, the heirs become the beneficiaries of the trust. Talk to an estate planning attorney to learn more.

GE-133484 (6/18) (Exp, 6/20)


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