| The Basics of Estate
Planning |
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By George M. Hiller, JD, LLM, MBA, CFP®
Your
estate consists of everything you own, including:
• Savings and investment accounts
• Equity in a home
• All personal property
• Retirement plan assets
• Life insurance proceeds
At death your property will go to either
your heirs, charitable organizations as you direct, or to the government
in the form of estate taxes. An estate plan is a set of strategies
insuring that, at the time of your death, your estate passes to
your chosen beneficiaries according to your intentions and without
undue taxes, costs and expenses. Your estate plan also dictates
the amount that will go to heirs, charity and the government. Without
an estate plan, the odds are that what you own will be passed in
ways you did not intend and with very high taxes and expenses that
could have been easily avoided.
Wills
The centerpiece of the estate plan is the
will, a legal document that allows you to:
• Specify who receives your property
• Appoint an executor to carry out the
will
• Assign a trustee to manage any trusts
created by the will
• Designate a guardian to take care
of minor children
If you die without a will, you lose the right
to make these choices and the state will determine the fate of your
interests according to its laws of intestacy.
It is estimated that over 70% of the adult
population in the United States are without valid wills. Every adult
should have one, and those who don’t should consider creating
one a priority. Because estate planning is best implemented with
specialized strategies, ideally you will have an attorney prepare
a will for you. If you decide not to consult an attorney there are
will kits available at a very reasonable cost, (such as the one
available through Crown Financial Ministries) that are generally
much better than having no will at all. But, if at all possible,
take advantage of the specialized knowledge and expertise an attorney
can provide.
Complex Wills
If your estate is greater than $1,000,000
then you may very well need a more complex will that is designed
to coordinate your unified credit and marital deduction with that
of your spouse. The unified credit you and your spouse can each
shelter up to $1,000,000 of your combined estate from estate taxes.
With proper wills, you can shelter up to $2,000,000 of your combined
estate from estate taxes. The amount of the unified credit is increasing
over the next few years to a maximum of $3,500,000 for each spouse
beginning in the year 2009.There is a one year repeal on estate
taxes in the year 2010.
In addition to coordinating the marital deductions
of both spouses, a complex will can also defer estate taxes until
the death of the surviving spouse. One spouse is allowed to make
qualifying gifts of qualifying gifts of property to the other spouse
without being subject to estate and gift taxes. Given that the estate
tax rate ranges from 37% to 50% of the fair market value of all
property owned at death, this ability to defer estate taxes until
the second death can be extremely valuable.
Power of Attorney Documents
Once you have proper wills in place, you should
consider your needs for other documents that frequently are a part
of a good estate plan, such as the Durable Power of Attorney for
Health Care. This document allows you to name an agent (frequently
your spouse or other family member) to make health care decisions
for you if you are not able to make those decisions yourself. This
document can also allow you to name the person you would want to
serve as your guardian should the court decide that you need one.
A Durable Power of Attorney for Property allows
you to name an agent (frequently a spouse or other family member)
to make decisions regarding your property. The person you designate
can make deposits or withdrawals from your bank and investment accounts,
pay bills, and enter into contractual arrangements on your behalf.
Trusts
There are many different kinds of trusts that
might be suitable for you depending upon your needs and objectives,
including revocable and irrevocable trusts.
- Revocable
trusts can be changed, amended or terminated over time.
They are often used to provide for management of assets, to avoid
probate, or to keep certain financial matters confidential. In
general, revocable trusts are very flexible, but they do not save
estate taxes.
- Irrevocable
trusts can not be changed, amended, or terminated once
established. They are much less flexible than revocable, but they
can often be used to avoid estate taxes.
- Irrevocable life insurance
trusts should be considered if you have a significant amount of
life insurance, generally $500,000 or more. This trust removes
life insurance proceeds from your taxable estate, allowing you
to avoid estate taxes on up to 50% of you life insurance proceeds.
Charitable Giving
You may want to coordinate the creation of
your estate plan with your giving to charitable organizations. Through
wise planning you can donate funds that would otherwise have gone
to pay estate or income taxes. Charitable trusts are useful if you
have highly appreciated stock, real estate, or other property. Properly
structured and implemented, this trust can allow you to avoid capital
gains tax on the sale of appreciated property, receive significant
income tax and estate tax benefits to yourself and other family
members, and make significant charitable gifts.
There are two types of charitable trusts which
can produce very favorable estate and income tax benefits.
- Charitable remainder trusts provide a lifetime
income to you and your spouse with the remaining interest going
to your designated charitable organizations at the death of the
surviving spouse.
- Charitable lead trusts typically
provide annual income to designated charitable organizations for
a certain number of years; after which, the remaining interest
goes to your children or other designated beneficiaries.
Retirement Assets
Assets held in qualified retirement
plans such as most IRAs, 401(k) plans, profit sharing plans and
other retirement plans are generally subject to both estate taxes
and income taxes. The combined effect of assessing both estate taxes
and income taxes on such retirement plan assets can result in overall
taxes of up to 75%. For individuals who have retirement plan assets
and charitable giving objectives as part of their estate plan, the
gifting of retirement plan assets to charity can be very beneficial
because such gifts avoid both estate taxes and income taxes.
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