Drastic proposed changes to our current estate and gift tax system may have a dramatic impact on wealth transfer planning. On March 25, 2021, Senator Bernie Sanders released his proposed estate and gift tax reform legislation, which includes lowering the federal estate tax exemption to $3.5 million and the federal gift tax exemption to $1 million. On March 29, 2021, several senators introduced a discussion draft of the Sensible Taxation and Equity Promotion (STEP) Act, which among other things would tax unrealized capital gains of assets transferred by gift or at death.
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PROPOSED LEGISLATION
Sanders’ legislation, known as the “For the 99.5% Act,” reduces the $11.7 million estate tax exemption to $3.5 million ($7 million for a married couple) and the reduction of the gifting exemption to $1 million in 2022. Thankfully, the “portability allowance” will not be reduced under the proposal and so the unused estate tax exemption from a deceased spouse would still be available to the surviving spouse.
Reduction of the gift tax exemption from the current ($11.7 million) estate tax exemption amount to $1 million per person (with no inflation adjustment) will mean that an individual will only be able to gift the $15,000 annual exclusion amount per person, plus $1 million per person without paying gift tax.
Currently, the maximum federal estate and gift tax rate is 40%. However, the new legislation proposes to increase the rate to 45% once a deceased person’s estate exceeds the $3.5 million exemption, 50% for estates exceeding $10 million, 55% for estates exceeding $50 million, and 65% for estates exceeding $1 billion.
While these increased rates might benefit charities whose donors will be incentivized to give to them rather than to Uncle Sam, there certainly will be an unwanted impact on a person’s empire that took a lifetime to build and the current estate planning for the same.
IMPACT ON PLANNING
If these proposed changes are made law, many mainstays of estate planning will be curtailed. The following are some of the planning strategies that will be impacted under the new rules:
Whether and in what form such proposed legislation will be passed is difficult to predict. However, the attorneys at Goosmann Law Firm will continue to monitor the proposed legislation as the situation progresses. In any event, reviewing current planning is a must, especially those families having assets expected to exceed $3.5 million per person and/or families whose existing plan implements advance wealth transfer strategies.