Introduction to Estate Planning

Estate Planning:

What is it and why do we do it?

You spend your entire life creating wealth. The more wealth you create the more unhappy the people you leave behind will be without the proper estate planning. Estate planning allows you to decide while you are alive how your assets will be distributed. It also allows you to protect your heirs from unanticipated devastating expenses ranging from debts to taxes to administrative fees.

Court and probate records show 75% of all estates do not have the necessary cash to pay for these expenses. Heirs are forced to quickly liquidate assets such as homes and businesses to pay these expenses, often at a fraction of their real value. If people didn't care about taking care of loved ones after they're gone, no one would bother completing an estate plan.

Our discussion will explore:

The material presented on our web site may contain concepts that have legal, accounting and tax implications. It is not intended to provide legal, accounting or tax advice, you may wish to consult a competent attorney, tax advisor, or accountant.

Wills

Everyone who is concerned how their assets will be divided should at the very least have a current and valid will.

The will should:

Wills are simple to create. Though you should always have it done by a qualified attorney, many courts have accepted simple handwritten wills drawn up without any legal counsel. Some states even accept oral wills.

Wills may be simple, but after death, they become a public document once they are entered into court. They instruct the court of your wishes. A will can be contested and it is up to the court to decide validity. Legal counsel may help you avoid many of the pitfalls associated with wills, especially in the area of contestability.

After death, wills must be brought before the courts. This process is called probate. This process could take from 9 months to 2 years or longer, and could cost 2% and sometimes up to 5% of the entire estate.

If the value of an individual's assets are high enough to be subject to estate taxes, wills do not help with estate taxes.

Executor

In most instances, when a person dies owning property of any real value, it is necessary to appoint someone to administer the estate. That someone could be an individual close to the deceased, a bank or trust. That individual who acts for, or "stands in the shoes of," the deceased is called the personal representative. If the personal representative is named in a will and the will is accepted as valid that person is known as the executor.

To carry out the administration of the estate, the executor is responsible for:


Probate

Probate is a legal process where your executor goes before a court and:

The pitfalls of probate:
Can probate be avoided?

Estate Taxes

The federal estate tax, initially adopted by Congress in 1916, is a tax on the right to transfer property at death. The Tax Reform Act of 1976 revised the federal estate tax to be a tax based on the value of all property and rights to property possessed by a decedent at his death or transferred by him by gift during his lifetime.

Exclusions:



2014 & 2015 Estate & Gift Taxes
For Deaths/Gifts
If Taxable Estate Is: Of the
Amount >
Over But Not > The Tax Is:
$0 $10,000 $0 + 18% $0
10,000 20,000 1,800 + 20% 10,000
20,000 40,000 3,800 + 22% 20,000
40,000 60,000 8,200 + 24% 40,000
60,000 80,000 13,000 + 26% 60,000
80,000 100,000 18,200 + 28% 80,000
100,000 150,000 23,800 + 30% 100,000
150,000 250,000 38,800 + 32% 150,000
250,000 500,000 70,800 + 34% 250,000
500,000 750,000 155,800 + 37% 500,000
750,000 1,000,000 248,300 + 39% 750,000
1,000,000+ -- 345,800 + 40% 1,000,000
Subtract applicable credit below from calculated tax
Exclusion Amount Applicable Credit
2014 5,340,000 2,081,800
2015 5,430,000 2,117,800
Annual Gift Tax Exclusion: $14,000 in 2014 & 2015

Trusts

A trust is the holding of property and the equitable management of that property by one person (a trustee) for another person (a beneficiary). The person who transfers property into a trust is called a grantor. A Living Trust is called a Living Trust simply because it is created while you are alive. In most Living Trusts the grantors (Husband and Wife) are also the trustees.

Almost anything can be placed in a trust: bank accounts, stocks, bonds, real estate, personal property, and life insurance. Once the trust is established, assets can be placed into the trust by simply changing the name or title of the asset. If constructed properly the grantor can still maintain full control of the assets.

Life Insurance

Life Insurance can provide much needed cash to pay for fees and taxes and also allow for an easier distribution of all assets.

Life insurance proceeds at death add to the value of the estate and therefore are subject to estate taxes. This can be avoided by having someone other than the insured own the insurance policy. This can be accomplished in two ways:

1. The children of the insured can own the policy.

2. An irrevocable life insurance trust can be created and funded by life insurance. The trust is irrevocable because the insured (Grantor) cannot have any rights or powers over the trust and no incidence of ownership over the life insurance policy.

© Copyright