Estate Planning Flashcards

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1
Q

Allowable deductions from Gross Estate

four deductions

A
  • funeral and administration expenses
  • debts of the decedent
  • certain taxes
  • casualty or theft losses
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2
Q

Essential Estate Planning documents for Special Needs Child

3 documents

A
  • Will
  • Letter of intent
  • Guardianship Appointment
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3
Q

GSTT Non-related skip persons

age difference

A

Skip person is 37.5 to 62.5 years younger than the transferor.

if you add the ages, they equal 100

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4
Q

Gifting Property

Gifting Property with LOSS:Scenario 1
When Sale Price > FMV

“Wait and See” Approach

A

= Donor’s HP + Basis

Donor gifts property at a loss. The donee subsequently sells the property for a gain, so the donee use the donor’s original basis to offset the gains AND inherits the donor’s holding period.

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5
Q

Gifting Property

Gifting Property with LOSS:Scenario 2
When Sale Price < FMV

“Wait and See” Approach

A

= HP + BASIS from Gift Date

Donor gifts property at a loss. The donee subsequently sells the property at a loss, so the donee uses the FMV from the gift date as the basis (step-up) AND the holding period will begin from the gift date.

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6
Q

Gifting Property

Gifting Property with LOSS: Scenario 3
When Sale Price is BETWEEN Basis and FMV

“Wait and See” Approach

A

= No loss or gain!

Donor gifts property at a loss. The donee subsequently sells property at a value between the donor’s basis and the FMV from the date of the gift, so the donee has no loss or gain (i.e. the double basis rule applies). The holding period is a non-factor.

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7
Q

Gifted Property

Gifted property with GAIN
&
Gift Tax Adjustment

A

If the FMV of the property at the time of the gift is greater than the donor’s basis, then:

  • The donee will assume the donor’s holding period and
  • The donee uses the donor’s basis as their own

When the donor has paid gift taxes, the “tacking on” rules apply to the basis.
Gift tax adjustment is calculated as:
[Gain ÷ (either FMV minus Annual Exclusion or FMV)] X Gift Taxes Paid

Exam question will likely say the “donor used their annual exclusion”, therefore the annual exclusion is deducted from the FMV. If they did make prior gifts to this donee and exceeded the annual gift tax exclusion, then just use FMV in the denominator. The numerator is the gain.

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8
Q

The federal estate tax is a tax on the transfer of property when a person dies. It is measured by the value of the property rights that are shifted from the decedent to others. It is a tax on the right to…

A

It is a tax on the right to transfer property or an interest in property, rather than a tax on the right to receive property.

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9
Q

Gifts can take on the following forms…

four forms

A
  • Outright transfer of property to an individual or trust
  • Forgiveness of a debt
  • Foregone interest on an intra-family, interest-free or below market loan
  • The assignment of the benefits of an insurance policy
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10
Q

What is the name of the estate where the separately-owned assets of the decedent’s estate transfer under the provisions of the will?

legal term

A

testate

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11
Q

Will substitutes

Which Will substitutes allow assets to avoid the probate process?

three substitutes

A

Three substitutes (T.L.C.):

    • Trusts (funded revocable trusts, irrevocable trusts, and property in a trust)
    • Operation of Law (JTWROS, Tenancy by the Entirety, Joint bank accounts, POD/TOD accounts, life estate).
    • Contract (named beneficiaries on life insurance, pension plans, IRAs, annuities).
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12
Q

Spousal Transfer

What type of trust is used when the surviving spouse does not need the trust income or corpus?

A

Estate Trust

Qualifies property for a marital deduction in the decedent’s estate.

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13
Q

Spousal Transfer

Surviving spouse to access trust income for health, education, maintenance, and support (aka, the ‘HEMS’ standard) without including the assets in their estate.

A

Ascertainable Standard

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14
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which trust qualifies transfers to a non-US citizen spouse for the unlimited marital deduction?

A

QDOT (Qualified Domestic Trusts)

Remember: ‘O’ for DOmestic

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15
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which trust is appropriate when decedent has had previous marriages and wants to take care of the current spouse but be certain his kids from prior marriages are well taken care of?

A

QTIP (Qualified Terminable Interest Trust)

  • Property passes gift and estate tax free under marital deduction (executor qualifies the TIP)
  • Provides the surviving spouse with income for life
  • Limited control to surviving spouse, so she cannot change the trust terms to cut out children from prior marriage.
  • Upon death of surviving spouse, gives trust corpus to children from a previous marriage tax-free BUT assets included in the surviving spouse’s estate.
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16
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which type of trust allows the surviving spouse to obtain tax-free income “if needed”, but with limited control, and assets won’t be included in the surviving spouse’s taxable estate?

A

B-Trust. AKA Bypass Trust, Residual Trust, Credit Shelter Trust, and Family Trust.

When surviving spouse passes, assets won’t be included in the surviving spouse’s taxable estate, as it “bypasses”. The assets are passed on to named beneficiaries without incurring significant estate taxes.

Allows the surviving spouse to obtain tax-free income “if needed”, but with limited control. Income interest is terminable interest property (TIP).

Decedent spouse cannot receive a marital deduction.

The spouse can be given a 5 by 5 power of appointment over the trust corpus and a limited power of appointment with an ascertainable standard (HEMS) to receive distributions from trust income and corpus.

B = Below ground, so control is with decedent, therefore included in taxable estate. Does NOT qualify for marital deduction.

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17
Q

Spousal Transfer

What type of trust provides the surviving spouse with a general power of appointment, access to income, and the ability to invade the trust corpus during life.

A

A-Trust

Also known as a Marital Trust or Power of Appointment Trust

Assets qualify for unlimited marital deduction for the decedent.

Surviving spouse must receive all income, which is paid at least annually.

Surviving spouse determines beneficiaries of the trust assets at death via general power of appointment in the will.

A=Above ground, so control remains with surviving spouse, therefore included in her taxable estate.

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18
Q

Spousal Transfer

What type of estate minimizes spouse’s total estate tax liability for their combined estates?

A

Estate equalization

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19
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which trusts provide the surviving spouse with all income annually?

A

A-Trust or QTIP

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20
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which trusts provide the surviving spouse with income if needed?

A

B-Trust or Estate Trust

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21
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which trusts allow the surviving spouse to choose trust beneficiaries?

A

A-Trust or Estate Trust

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22
Q

Spousal Transfer

Which type of trust allows the surviving spouse to do post-mortem estate planning determine what portion of the decedent’s estate to transfer into a trust to use the decedent’s unified credit?

A

Disclaimer trust

Used by spouses to avoid estate taxes on large estates or to keep assets away from creditors. The spouse chooses not to inherit the assets, and a qualified disclaimer is used to create a Disclaimer Trust.

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23
Q

What type of trust is used when both spouses have wealth above their combined lifetime exclusion amount ($12.92M)?

A

A-B Trust

The order of funding is B-Trust, then A-Trust (B = before, then A=after)

B trust is filled with decedent’s lifetime exclusion (but no marital deduction), with the remainder going into the A-Trust.

Surviving spouse has control over A-trust, hence included in her taxable estate upon death.

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24
Q

For a gift from a US citizen spouse to a Non-US citizen spouse, what is the gift tax exclusion limit?

A

$175,000 gift tax exclusion

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25
Q

Alternate Valuation Date (AVD)

A

This extends the valuation to six months after the date of death.

One exception exists for assets sold in between the DoD and AVD - those are treated as valued on their date of sale.

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26
Q

Alternate Valuation Date (AVD)

Which assets do not qualify for AVD and must be valued using FMV at DoD?

A

Depreciating assets whose value decline over time:
* Cars
* Patents, Copyrights, Intellectual Property
* Life Estates
* Remainder interests

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27
Q

Which method of asset transfer provides each surviving family member with the same percentage of the decedent’s assets?

A

Per Capita

Used when assets are to be distributed equally amongst all survivors.
Think of ‘heads of state’ - each country wants an equal share.

The term translates to “according to the number of individuals.”

Uncle Joe Foligno

28
Q

Probate Estate Inclusion

Which property ownership titling will be included in probate?

A

Separate ownership - 100%

Tenancy In Common - the decedent’s FMV interest (think of pizza slice).

Community Property - If there are NOT rights of survivorship added to the property.

Separate ownership can avoid probate if the owner transfers the individually owned property into a funded revocable living trust.

29
Q

Gross Estate Inclusion

Which property ownership titling will be included in the gross estate?

A

Separate ownership = 100%

JTWROS
* Spouses = 50%
* Non-spouses = FMV x % contribution

Tenancy by Entirety = 50% of FMV

Tenancy in Common = FMV of ownership %

Community Property = 50% of the FMV of decedent’s interest

30
Q

Trusts for Minors

What are the differences between 2503(b) and 2503(c) trusts?

A

2503(b)
bring beneficiaries bucks’ at least annually
* Can last for the lifetime of the beneficiaries.
* Muliple beneficiaries (income distributed to at least one beneficiary annually).
* Principal can be witheld from beneficiary until death. “Bad Boy Trust”

2503(c)
accumulate and can cease current cash’.
* One beneficiary
* No requirement for income distributions. Income accumulates until age 21.
* Unexpended principal & income must be distributed no later than age 21.

Both are present interest gifts and eligible for annual gift tax exclusion. So, both can create Kiddie Tax!

31
Q

What is a tax-efficient way to fund a Special Needs Trust?

A

For the trust to purchase a life insurance policy on the parent’s lives. The trust funds pay the premiums, and the payout is paid to the trust. This preserves eligibility for government benefits and pays for extra services not covered by government public assistance programs.

32
Q

What are the primary benefits of establishing a Special Needs Trust?

A
  • Preserve eligibility for government benefits.
  • Pay for extra services not covered by government public assistance programs.
33
Q

What are the types of Special Needs Trusts?

A
  • Pooled: managed by non-profit
  • First-party: funded by the person with a disability caused by an injury.
  • Third-party: Often part of donor’s estate plan (assets never belonged to beneficiary).
34
Q

ILIT (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust)

When a grantor transfers an existing life insurance policy into an ILIT, no portion of the death benefit proceeds will be included in the owner’s estate assuming the owner survives the transfer of the policy by at least how many years?

A

3 years

35
Q

ILIT (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust)

How do Unfunded ILITs qualify for the annual gift tax exclusion?
How do withdrawals work for beneficiaries?

A

Crummey powers turn life insurance future interest gifts into present interest gifts, qualifying for the annual gift tax exclusion.

Beneficiaries can take withdrawals limited to the lesser of:
* the annual exclusion.
* the annual contribution made to the trust.
* the greater of $5000 or 5% of the amount transferred into the trust (“5 by 5 powers”)

36
Q

ILIT (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust)

What is transferred into a Funded ILIT?
Who pays tax on trust income?
Are there Crummey powers?

A

Transfer a life insurance policy and income-producing property into the ILIT.

Trust income funded by other investment vehicles are used to pay the policy premiums.

The grantor is taxed on ALL of the trust income at their marginal tax rate due to grantor trust rules.

No Crummey powers.

37
Q

Which is more tax efficient - Funded ILIT or Unfunded ILIT?

A

Unfunded ILIT

Crummey powers are used in Unfunded ILITs.

38
Q

What are the three exceptions to exclude life insurance face value from the gross estate?

A

Generally, on life insurance policies where the client is both Owner and Insured, the face amount of the insurance is pulled into their gross estate. But there are some exceptions:
* Universal Life B policy
* Policies where the estate is the named beneficiary
* Policies where the decedent is the Owner but someone else is the Insured. This is called Interpolated Terminal Reserve.

39
Q

Are gains on appreciating property in a GRAT, GRUT, ILIT or QPRT taxed to the Trust, Beneficiaries, or Grantor?

A

Grantor

40
Q

Seth received trust corpus that was not subject to estate or gift tax. The trust was established by Seth’s grandfather. What type of GST transaction has occurred?

A

Taxable distribution

Any distribution of income or corpus from a trust to a skip person that is not otherwise subject to estate or gift tax is a taxable distribution.

41
Q

What types of trust accounts are present interest gifts?

A
  • UGMA or UTMA
  • 2503(b) trust
  • 2503(c) trust: Though income accumulates, there is an exception that gifts into a 2503(c) trust qualify for the annual exclusion.
42
Q

Future Interest Gifts

A
  • Remainders (i.e., CRAT/CRUT)
  • Reversions
  • Anything that accumulates income in a trust.
  • Non-income producing property in trusts.
  • Trust has a sprinkle or a spray provision.

Annual exclusion does NOT apply

43
Q

A marital deduction is not available for Terminable Interest Property (TIP). What are the exceptions?

A

Spouse is given a life estate in trust and is given a General Power of Appointment over the trust corpus.

An executor qualifies the Terminable Interest Property (Q-TIP election).

44
Q

For Community Property, how much is the step-up in basis for surviving spouse?

A

100%

Essentially, the property could be transferred on the DoD and sold without incurring any gains.

45
Q

Non-grantor trust income

With non-grantor trusts, how does taxation work?

A

Non-grantor trusts retain income, therefore the beneficiaries are taxed on the income generated using the Non-Grantor Trusts Income Tax Rates provided in the CFP Tax Table.

The beneficiary will be responsible for taxes on the lesser of the trust income earned/generated (DNI), or the amount required to be distributed according to the trust document.

When trust distribution exceeds the DNI amount, any excess is treated as a non-taxable transfer of corpus.

REMINDER: With grantor trusts, the grantor is taxed on the income generated at their ordinary income rates.

46
Q

Intra-Family Transfers

With Installment Notes, SCINs, and Private Annuities, what’s the impact on the seller’s gross estate?

A

Installment Notes: Unpaid installments included in seller’s gross estate.

SCINs: Cancels at death and are removed from gross estate of seller.

Private Annuities: If single life annuity, then not included in seller’s gross estate. If joint & survivor annuity, payment continues to survivor, and PV of future payments is included in seller’s estate (but marital deduction can offset).

47
Q

Intra-Family Transfers

Which are secured via collateral?

A

Installment Notes & SCINs

48
Q

Federal estate tax is due within how many months of the decedent’s death?

A

9 months

49
Q

Estate Planning priorities

A
  1. Protect Income
    Disability insurance / Life insurance for survivors.
    Higher priority if one income earner.
  2. Dependents
    Guardianship in the Will.
    High priority ALWAYS.
  3. Standard of Living
    Life Insurance.
    High priority with children (at least term coverage through kids age 24).
    High priority to protect income earners.
50
Q

Which property transferred via a Will is subject to probate?

A
  • Community property.
  • Tenancy in Common property.
  • Property passing from a will into a testamentary trust.
  • Property transferred by a pour-over will into a trust.
  • Life insurance policy owned by the decedent who was NOT the insured.
51
Q

When gifting property, how does the Clawback Rule work?

A

The general rule is that property gifted within three years of death is NOT included in the gross estate. Items are “clawed back” when there is gifted property within three years of death, AND,
* that property is part of a life estate, or
* carries a reversionary interest, or
* is within a unfunded revocable trust that becomes irrevocable at death, or
* is life insurance owned by the insured.

BOTH the 3 years and one of the four situations must apply in order for property to be ‘clawed back’ into the gross estate.

52
Q

After the end of the fiscal year, how many days thereafter can the trustee make distributions and still be able to report them on the prior-year tax return?

A

The 65-day Rule allows the fiduciary to make distributions within 65 days of the new tax year (i.e., Trustee can make a distribution as late as March 7, 2023 which counts toward 2022 distributions).

53
Q

Which IRC section allows the executor and trustee of a revocable trust to elect to treat the estate and trust as one for tax purposes?

A

Section 645 Election

Allows the trust to have extended payment deadlines.

54
Q

Estate Planning Taxation

When does taxation occur for the Grantor, Trustee and Beneficiary?

A

Grantor: When they receive income.

Trustee: In a non-grantor trust, retained income that has not been distributed will be taxed to the trust. (Use the CFP provided tax table to calculate)

Beneficiary: In a non-grantor trust, they are taxed on distributed income.

55
Q

What type of trust is effective immediately, and contains property that passes outside the will and probate process?

A

Inter-Vivos Trust (Living Trust)

56
Q

Charitable Lead Trust

How is taxation of income for Grantor CLTs and Non-Grantor CLTs?

A

Income earned is taxed to the grantor for BOTH grantor-CLT or Non-grantor CLT.

In a Non-grantor CLT, the trust is the owner of the trust assets, not the Grantor, therefore the grantor is not eligible for a tax deduction at the time the CLT is funded.

57
Q

Charitable Lead Trust

Which CLT is the best choice when interest rates are lower?

A

CLAT

This means the charity will receive smaller annuity payments, so the trust corpus to the remaindermen will have greater value.

58
Q

Property titling

Which form of property ownership exists between co-tenants who are married in which the spouses own the whole interest collectively, but no undivided individual share?

A

Tenancy by the Entirety

The estate is based on the common law concept of “spousal unity” - that married couples are treated as one person.

59
Q

Which party receives legal title to the property placed in the trust?

A

Trustee

60
Q

Which estate planning document can the testator name guardians, appoint an executor, and direct assets into a revocable living trust (RLT) that were incorrectly titled.

A

Pour-over Will

The pour-over will has similar basic functions to the last will, however, it is often used with a revocable living trust in estate planning. Specifically, the pour-over will serves to direct assets into a RLT that were:

  • Acquired after RLT established
  • Incorrectly titled
  • Excluded from the trust

Property transferred by a pour-over will into a trust is subject to probate.

61
Q

What type of will is made in agreement with another person to dispose of certain property interests?

A

Mutual will

62
Q

Which type of will designates that each person’s property will be distributed to the other person?

A

Reciprocal will

63
Q

What is a handwritten will called?

A

Holographic will

64
Q

What is an oral will called?

A

Nuncupative will

65
Q

Which estate planning document can a testator name guardians, appoint an executor, and direct separately-owned assets and property at death.

A

Last will

The last will directs distribution of separately-owned assets/property at death. In addition, the testator (creator of the will) can appoint guardians and name an executor to administer the estate on the will.

Remember ‘Will.I.AM’ … Will = Individually-owned Asset Movement!

66
Q

Which estate planning document is used when an individual is terminally ill, permanently unconscious, or incapacitated, that describes desired medical treatment concerning end-of-life care or life-savings measures.

A

Living will

67
Q

What are the requirements for a Qualified Disclaimer?

A
  1. Refusal or rejection -> in writing
  2. The writing must be received no later than 9 months after the later of:
    * the date on which the transfer creating the interest is made, or
    * the date the person disclaiming reaches age 21.