Understanding
the Gift Tax Exclusion
Most
of us will never face taxes related to money or assets we give away.
Provided by Jared Daniel of Wealth Guardian Group
“How can I
avoid the federal gift tax?” If this question is on your mind, you aren’t
alone. The good news is that few taxpayers or estates will ever have to pay it.
Misconceptions surround this tax. The IRS sets
annual and lifetime gift tax exclusion amounts, and this is where the confusion
develops.
Here’s what you have to remember: practically
speaking, the federal gift tax is a tax
on estates. If it wasn’t in
place, the rich could simply give away the bulk of their money or property
while living to spare their heirs from inheritance taxes.
Now that you know the reason the federal
government established the gift tax, you can see that the lifetime gift tax
exclusion matters more than the annual one.
“What percentage
of my gifts will be taxed this year?” Many people wrongly assume that if they give a gift
exceeding the annual gift tax exclusion, their tax bill will go up next year as a result. Unless
the gift is huge, that won’t likely occur.
The IRS has set the annual
gift tax exclusion at $14,000 this year. What this means is that you can gift
up to $14,000 each to as many
individuals as you like in 2013 without having to pay any gift taxes. A married
couple may gift up to $28,000 each to an unlimited number of individuals tax-free
this year. The gifts may be made in cash, or they can be made in stock, contributions
to 529 plans, collectibles, real estate – just about any form of property with
value, as long as you cede ownership and control of it.1,2,3
So how are amounts over the $14,000
annual exclusion handled? The excess amounts count against the $5.25 million
lifetime gift tax exclusion. While you have to file a gift tax return if you
make a gift larger than $14,000 in 2013, you owe no gift tax until your total
gifts exceed the lifetime exclusion.2,3
“What happens if I go over the lifetime
exclusion?” If that occurs, then you will
pay a 40% gift tax on gifts above the $5.25 million lifetime exclusion amount.
One exception, though: all gifts that you make to your spouse are tax-free provided
he or she is a U.S. citizen. This is known as the marital deduction.1,2,3
“But aren’t the gift tax and the estate
tax unified?” They are. The gift tax
exclusion and the estate tax exclusion are sometimes called the unified credit. So if you have already
made taxable lifetime gifts that have used up $3 million of the current $5.25
million unified credit, then only $2.25 million of your estate will be exempt
from inheritance taxes if you die in 2013.3
However, the $5.25 million unified credit given to each of us is
portable. That means that if you don’t use all of it up during your lifetime,
the unused portion of the credit can pass to your spouse at your death. So if
you only use up $1.25 million of your unified credit during your lifetime and
your spouse has the full $5.25 million credit remaining, your spouse would have
the chance to transfer as much as $9.25 million tax-free, either through gifts
made during your life or after your death.3
In sum, most estates can make larger gifts during life without any
estate, gift or income tax consequences. If you have estate planning questions
in mind, turn to a legal or financial
professional well versed in these matters for answers.
Jared Daniel may be reached
at www.wgmoney.com or
jared.daniel@wealthguardiangroup.com
This material was prepared by MarketingLibrary.Net Inc., and does
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are not illustrative of any particular investment.
Citations.
1 - www.chron.com/news/article/New-act-clears-up-estate-gift-tax-confusion-4301217.php
[2/22/13]
2 - www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/changes-gift-tax-laws-coming.html
[1/13]
3 - www.forbes.com/sites/deborahljacobs/2013/01/02/after-the-fiscal-cliff-deal-estate-and-gift-tax-explained/
[1/11/13]
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