Understanding Estate Taxes

How To Reduce Or Eliminate Your Estate Cost

Estate Planning > FAQ Topics > Estate Taxes FAQs
 
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4. Use Both Exemptions

If your spouse is a U.S. citizen, you can leave him or her an unlimited amount when you die with no estate tax. But this can be a tax trap, because it wastes an exemption.

Say, for example, that Bob and Sue together have a net estate of $2 million and they both die in 2011 when the federal exemption is $1 million. Bob dies first. He leaves everything to Sue, so no estate taxes are due then. When Sue dies, her estate of $2 million uses her $1 million exemption. The tax bill on the remaining $1 million? $435,000!

But if, instead, Bob and Sue plan ahead, they can use both exemptions and pay no estate taxes. A tax-planning provision in their living trust splits their $2 million estate into two trusts of $1 million each. When Bob dies, his trust uses his $1 million exemption. When Sue dies, her trust uses her $1 million exemption. This reduces their taxable estate to $0, so the full $2 million can go to their loved ones.

This planning can also be done in a will, but you would not avoid probate or enjoy the other benefits of a living trust.

 

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