Progar & Company, P.A.
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Retained life interests (MS Word)
Retained life interests (.pdf)
Retained life interests
Dear Reader:
You recently asked about the future impact on your federal estate
tax of giving property away while retaining an interest in it. Many
taxpayers are interested in such moves—hoping to get the property
out of their estates while keeping some strings attached. Under the
estate tax rules, however, this is a dangerous approach: the entire
value of the property at the time of your death will be included in
your estate. Even though federal tax legislation enacted in 2001
repeals the estate tax, the repeal is not effective until 2010. In
the meantime, the rules on giving property away while retaining an
interest in it remain in force.
Typically, the situation arises when the taxpayer transfers
ownership of a substantial amount of his assets to a trust for the
benefit of his family but keeps the right to the income from the
trust property for as long as he lives. This arrangement splits the
property interest into the taxpayer's life interest and the
beneficiaries' remainder interests. Valuation tables establish the
value of each interest, based on the age of the taxpayer and a
reasonable interest rate.
As for the tax results, first, the granting of the remainder
interest to the beneficiaries is a taxable gift in the year in which
the trust is set up even though they will not receive the property
until the future. It is taxable in its entirety, but because it is a
gift of a future interest, it does not qualify for the annual gift
tax exclusion. Although you will not actually have to pay any gift
tax until your lifetime gifts total more than the $1 million
exemption provided by the unified credit, taxable gifts will use up
part (or all) of this credit, which could have been available for
your estate. (The amount exempted from gift tax by the
unified credit remains at $1 million through 2009, but the amount
exempted from estate tax by the unified credit is $3.5
million in 2009).
Second, even though you were treated as giving away the remainder
interest, the entire value of the property is included in your
estate at your death. (To mitigate the tax cost of this inconsistent
treatment, your estate is allowed a credit for any gift taxes paid
during life with respect to the gift.)
Retained interests.
Note that merely retaining the right to the income even if you never
use that right (i.e., never receive any income from the property)
will cause the property to be included in your estate.
Additionally, if you keep the right to the income for a designated
period of time instead of for life, or until a specified dollar
amount is reached, the property still comes back into your estate if
you in fact die before the period ends or the amount is reached. For
example, if you retain the right to income for just two years, the
property is included in your estate if you die before the two-year
period ends. Similarly, if you retain the right to the first $15,000
of income from the transferred property, the property is included in
your estate if you die before receiving the entire $15,000.
Even if you do not retain the right to receive the income yourself,
the property may be included in your estate if you retain powers
over it, e.g., the power to designate the beneficiaries or their
interests.
Real estate.
The retained interest rules are also commonly triggered when a
taxpayer transfers the ownership of noncash property like a
residence to children or others but retains the right to live in it
for life. In this case, retaining the use or enjoyment of the
transferred property for life will cause the property to be included
in the estate in its entirety. Even if there is no formal agreement
granting the taxpayer the right to continue living in the home, if
he in fact continues to do so for life, the IRS may find an implied
right was retained.
The three-year rule.
If a taxpayer transfers property but retains a life interest,
inclusion in the estate can be avoided by his giving up the life
interest. However, under a special rule, even if the retained
interest is given up, the property will be included in the estate if
the transferor dies within three years from the time the interest
was given up.
If you would like to discuss this area in the context of your
overall estate plan or have any additional questions, please call me
at your earliest convenience.
Lewes CPA
office