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“Portability” Does Not Apply To All Wealth Transfers in Ann Arbor
July 1st, 2013
My father is a widower. My mother passed away in 2006. Does the permanent change to "portability" that you have discussed in your columns on estate and gift taxes apply here? And would it affect my father's annual gift-tax exclusion amount this year?
Many people are still scrambling to come to terms with the tax changes enacted at the end of last year with the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA). Among the changes involved, some estate planning techniques may need more clarity – so it is with “portability.”
A recent Q&A in The Wall Street Journal reveals that the “Gift-Tax Exclusion Isn't 'Portable'.” Consequently, there are some important lessons to draw from this.
The concept of “portability” first arose in 2011. Essentially, “portability” is a feature of your unified credit. The unified credit is a fancy term for the amount you can exclude from taxation either by way of gifting during your lifetime or through bequests after death. Under current tax law, you get one unified amount ($5.25 million under current law) to use either in life or in death. If unused by one spouse at death, the amount becomes “portable” in that such spouse can pass any unused credit to their surviving spouse in much the same way they pass their assets.
This is not the same as your annual gift tax exclusion, which is the amount you or anyone can give during the course of any given year without taxation or effect upon your lifetime gift tax exclusion (aka unified credit). Your annual gift tax exclusion is not “portable.”
Once we get used to it, “portability” may be a real time-saver and could simplify many estate plans. In the interim, however, it is strange in its novelty compared to traditionally-accepted estate planning techniques.
Even if you are not susceptible to the estate tax at its current level, you might want to investigate how “portability” may impact your own estate planning. Note: the benefits of “portability” are not automatic and require some very specific steps to enjoy it.
To talk with estate planning attorney Terry Bertram, visit www.elderlawannarbor.com.
Reference: The Wall Street Journal (June 22, 2013) “Gift-Tax Exclusion Isn't 'Portable'”
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