Tax deal reshapes estate planning landscape The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) that averted the United States’ descent over the “fiscal cliff” includes some welcome relief from both the large estate tax increases that had been scheduled to go into effect in 2013 and the uncertainty that has plagued the federal estate tax regime in recent years. The act addresses gift, estate and generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax rates and exemptions, as well as various breaks that may affect your estate plan. Estate, gift and GST taxes Beginning in 2013, ATRA sets a maximum tax rate of 40% for estate, gift and GST taxes. It also retains a $5 million unified estate and gift tax exemption and a $5 million GST tax exemption. Both exemptions are adjusted annually for inflation, so the 2013 exemptions will be a little more than the 2012 exemptions of $5.12 million. Estate taxes will increase over those of 2011 and 2012 (and, in some cases, 2010), when the maximum tax rate was 35%. If Congress hadn’t passed ATRA, however, the increase would have been much larger: The maximum rate would have reverted to 55% in 2013 and the exemption amount would have dropped to $1 million (with no adjustment for inflation except for the GST tax). ATRA also removes the veil of uncertainty surrounding federal gift, estate and GST taxes by making these changes permanent — or at least as permanent as any tax code provision can be. There’s nothing to stop Congress from modifying these taxes in the future. But the absence of an expiration date allows people to develop estate planning strategies with greater confidence. Portability ATRA also makes “portability” of estate tax exemptions between spouses permanent. When one spouse dies, his or her estate can make a portability election, allowing the surviving spouse to use the deceased spouse’s unused exemption amount. Portability enables married couples to take advantage of their combined exemption amounts without sophisticated estate planning techniques, such as credit shelter trusts. A credit shelter trust makes the most of the deceased spouse’s exemption and, by limiting the surviving spouse’s control over the trust, keeps the assets out of the surviving spouse’s taxable estate. Portability, on the other hand, preserves the deceased spouse’s exemption even if the surviving spouse gains unrestricted access to the deceased spouse’s wealth. Before ATRA, the value of portability was hampered by its temporary nature: It was available only in 2011 and 2012, making it risky for couples to rely on it. Permanence now makes portability a viable alternative to more complicated estate planning techniques. Keep in mind, however, that trusts continue to offer significant benefits, including:
- Professional asset management,
- Protection of assets against creditors’ claims,
- Avoidance of transfer taxes on future appreciation,
- GST tax planning (portability doesn’t apply to the GST tax), and
- Preservation of state exclusion amounts in states that don’t recognize portability.
- The federal estate tax deduction (rather than a credit) for state estate taxes,
- Deferral and installment payment of estate taxes attributable to qualified closely held business interests, and
- GST tax protections, including deemed and retroactive allocation of GST tax exclusions, relief for late allocations, and the ability to sever trusts for GST tax purposes.


