Can a 529 Plan Help with Estate Planning?

Parents and grandparents use 529 education savings plans to help with the cost of college expenses. However, they are also a good tool for estate planning, according to a recent article, “Reap The Recently-Created Planning Advantages Of 529 Plans” from Forbes.

There’s no federal income tax deduction for contributions to a 529 account. However, 35 states provide a state income tax benefit—a credit or deduction—for contributions, as long as the account is in the state’s plan. Six of those 35 states provide income tax benefits for contributions to any 529 plan, regardless of the state it’s based in.

Contributions also receive federal estate and gift tax benefits. A contribution qualifies for the annual gift tax exclusion, which is $16,000 per beneficiary for gifts made in 2022. Making a contribution up to this amount avoids gift taxes and, even better, doesn’t reduce your lifetime estate and gift tax exemption amount.

Benefits don’t stop there. If it works with the rest of your estate and tax planning, in one year, you can use up to five years’ worth of annual gift tax exclusions with 529 contributions. You may contribute up to $80,000 per beneficiary without triggering gift taxes or reducing your lifetime exemption.  Keep in mind that you are just making a lump sum gift, so gifting in the next 4 years to that 529 beneficiary is taxable.

You can, of course, make smaller amounts without incurring gift taxes. However, if this size gift works with your estate plan, you can choose to use the annual exclusion for a grandchild for the next five years. Making this move can remove a significant amount from your estate for federal estate tax purposes.

While the money is out of your estate, you still maintain some control over it. You choose among the investment options offered by the 529 plan. You also have the ability to change the beneficiary of the account to another family member or even to yourself, if it will be used for qualified educational purposes.

The money can be withdrawn from a 529 account if it is needed or if it becomes clear the beneficiary won’t use it for educational purposes. The accumulated income and gains will be taxed and subject to a 10% penalty but the original contribution is not taxed or penalized. It may be better to change the beneficiary if another family member is more likely to need it.

As long as they remain in the account, investment income and gains earned compound tax free. Distributions are also tax free, as long as they are used to pay for qualified education expenses.

In recent years, the definition of qualified educational expenses has changed. When these accounts were first created, many did not permit money to be spent on computers and internet fees. Today, they can be used for computers, room, and board, required books and supplies, tuition and most fees.  They have become fairly expensive.

The most recent expansion is that 529 accounts can be used to pay for a certain amount of student debt. However, if it is used to pay interest on a loan, the interest is not tax deductible.

Finally, a 2021 law made it possible for a grandparent to set up a 529 account for a grandchild and distributions from the 529 account are not counted as income to the grandchild. This is important when students are applying for financial aid; before this law changed, the funds in the 529 accounts would reduce the student’s likelihood of getting financial aid.

If you want to explore more ideas on how to pay for a loved one’s education, see this article:  https://galligan-law.com/how-grandparents-can-help-pay-for-college/  

As a quick aside, contributions to a 529 plan for a child or grandchild are also exempt as transfers under Medicaid.  This means that if you are in a spenddown situation trying to become eligible for Medicaid, contributions to this fund might be very attractive.

Two factors to consider: which state’s 529 is most advantageous to you and how it can be used as part of your estate plan.

Reference: Forbes (Oct. 27, 2022) “Reap The Recently-Created Planning Advantages Of 529 Plans”

 

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Top 10 Success Tips for Estate Planning

Unless you’ve done the planning, assets may not be distributed according to your wishes and loved ones may not be taken care of after your death. These are just two reasons to make sure you have an estate plan, according to the recent article titled “Estate Planning 101: 10 Tips for Success” from the Maryland Reporter.

There are several other key tips for estate planning for you to consider, here are 10 of them:

Gather Asset Information.  This should include all your property, real estate, liquid assets, investments and personal possessions, and not just assets you think your Will will control, gather it all.  With this list, consider what you would like to happen to each item after your death. If you have many assets, this process will take longer—consider this a good thing. Don’t neglect digital assets. The goal of a careful detailed list is to enable your fiduciaries to quickly identify, gather and ultimately distribute your assets.

One more key thing, put this list in a place that’s accessible.  Don’t assume technology will make that possible as an era of passwords and high security, although great in most contexts, makes accessibility difficult for your family.  Instead, consider sharing information with them in advance so they are prepared to deal with this.

Meet with an estate planning attorney to create wills and/or trusts. These documents dictate how your assets are distributed after your death. Without them, the laws of your state may be used to distribute assets. You also want to pick the person whose job it is to wind-up your affairs, and these documents name the person responsible for carrying out your instructions.  If you already have estate planning documents, you should have them reviewed from time to time as clients sometimes out grow their estate plans, or have better options on how to accomplish their goals.

Anecdotally, I participate in estate-related study groups, message boards and other groups in which lawyers workshop estate problem.  The hardest cases to figure out and the hardest cases to get a satisfactory conclusion for are very typically cases where no estate planning was done.

If you don’t have an estate plan and want ideas on how to start the process, see this article:  https://galligan-law.com/how-to-begin-the-estate-planning-process/

Guardians for minors, the person who will raise your minor children if you should pass.  You can nominate who will serve as their guardians.

Beneficiaries named?  Now, very frequently people tell me in consultations that they don’t need an estate plan, because they have beneficiaries named on all of their assets. That is virtually never true, however, for this list’s purposes, I say it is worth reviewing which assets should name beneficiaries (e.g. life insurance or retirement funds) and confirm they match what you want.

One of the difficulties with beneficiary designations is that they are like old estate plans, people set them, and then never change them.  I’ve seen ex-spouses left on them, mistakes like naming only one child to receive everything because they will “do the right thing,” not having contingencies if the named person predeceased, and so on. They also write their own rules on contingencies.  So, if you leave your IRA to 3 named children, but one of them is deceased, their portion may go to their siblings, or maybe their children, or even possibly your estate.  The answer lies in the plan documents, so it is important to consider them in your estate plan.

Also, clients may have excellent wills that address all form of concerns.  But, then names one child as beneficiary of their assets.  That typically means the will has to be probated (did you have a beneficiary on your house?), but zero cash to fund it.  That is not an enviable position for the executor.  Plus, if the will establishes trusts, plans for minors or incapacitated beneficiaries, or any of the many other problems you can proactively plan for, but the asset goes directly to a person instead, all of those protections and solutions were circumvented.  So, speak with your estate planning attorney to ensure the beneficiary designations work with your estate plan.

Make your wishes crystal clear. Legal documents are often challenged if they are not prepared by an experienced estate planning attorney or if they are vaguely worded. You want to be sure there are no ambiguities in your will or trust documents. Consider the use of “if, then” statements. For example, “If my husband predeceases me, then I leave my house to my children.”  This is especially true in contingencies, which I’ve found people typically haven’t considered.

Trusts may be more important than you think in estate planning. Trusts allow you to take assets out of your probate estate and have these assets managed by a trustee of your choice, who distributes assets directly to beneficiaries. You don’t have to have millions to benefit from a trust.  I’ve written extensively about the benefits of trusts, so you can find several articles elsewhere on that topic.

List your debts. This is not as much fun as listing assets, but still important for your executor and heirs. Mortgage payments, car payments, credit cards and personal loans are to be paid first out of estate accounts before funds can be distributed to beneficiaries. Having this information will make your executor’s tasks easier.

Plan for digital assets. If you want your social media accounts to be deleted or emails available to a designated person after you die, you’ll need to start with a list of the accounts, usernames, passwords, whether the platform allows you to designate another person to have access to your accounts and how you want your digital assets handled after death. This plan should be in place in case of incapacity as well.

Plan for Incapacity.  All too often, clients only think of estate planning in the context of their passing.  That is of course part of it, but sometimes it is even more critical to consider incapacity.  What happens with your assets if your health doesn’t permit you to handle your own finances?  Who would speak for you?  Do you want them to do whatever they want, or do you want to give them direction?  This is extremely important as it directly affects your well-being as this person will pay for your daily needs and medical expenses.

Plan for Long Term Care. The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that about 70% of Americans will need some type of long-term care during their lifetimes. Some options are private LTC insurance, government programs and self-funding.

The more planning done in advance, the more likely your loved ones will know what to do if you become incapacitated and know what you wanted when you die.

Resource: Maryland Reporter (Sep. 27, 2022) “Estate Planning 101: 10 Tips for Success”

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Making a Gift on your Deathbed?

A new case out of Tax Court centers on the question of when a “deathbed gift” is complete for federal estate and gift tax purposes.  Clients make gifts to reduce the federal estate tax, or reduce it to a manageable size, especially as we draw closer to 2026 when the estate tax exemption will be a far lower number.

The two tax law provisions affecting this are described in the article “Tax Court Says When Deathbed Gifts Are Complete” from accounting WEB:

Annual gift tax exclusion. A taxpayer may give gifts to recipients under the annual gift tax exclusion without incurring any federal gift taxes. The exclusion, indexed for inflation in $1,000 increments, is $16,000 per recipient in 2022. It’s doubled to $32,000 for joint gifts made by a married couple. Estates can be reduced with planned use of the annual gift tax exclusion. For instance, if a taxpayer and a spouse give the maximum $16,000 to five relatives for five years in a row, they will have transferred $800,000 ($32,000 x 5 x 5) out of their estate, free of taxes.  This is enhanced when you make gifts of different assets that can be discounted in value.

Now, every time I write an article about gifting, I always temper it.  You’ll noticed from the next paragraph that the estate tax doesn’t apply to too many people, and so may not be advantageous.  It is also true that assets not in your estate at your death do not receive a step up in basis.  This applies to things like stock, real estate and many other non-cash items, which means gifting may ultimately increase the total tax to beneficiaries instead of reducing it.  So, it is worth discussing this with a professional before starting a gifting campaign.  See our website for a much broader approach to estate tax planning.  https://galligan-law.com/practice-areas/estate-tax-planning/  

Unified estate and gift tax exemption. In addition to the annual gift exemption, gifts may be sheltered from tax by the unified estate and gift tax exemption. As of this writing, the exemption is $10 million, indexed for inflation, which brings it to $12.06 million in 2022. It is scheduled to drop to $5 million, plus inflation indexing, in 2026.

Using the exemption during the taxpayer’s lifetime reduces the available estate shelter upon death. These two provisions give even very wealthy taxpayers a great deal of flexibility regarding liquid assets.

In the new case, Estate of DeMuth v. Comm’r, TC Memo 2022-72, 7/12/22, the agent under a power of attorney for a Pennsylvania resident made gifts of the annual gift tax exclusion on an annual basis from 2007 to 2014 to his siblings and other family members, in accordance with the POA.

The father’s health began to fail in 2015 and he passed away on September 11. On September 6, five days before he died, the son wrote eleven checks, totaling $464,000 from the father’s investment account.

Some recipients deposited the checks before the decedent’s death, but others did not. Only one check was paid by the investment account before the decedent’s death.

The question before the Tax Court: are the gifts complete and removed from the decedent’s estate?

According to the IRS, any checks deposited before death should be excluded from the taxable estate, but the Tax Court looked to the state’s law to determine the outcome of the other checks. The Tax Court ruled the checks not deposited in time must be included in the decedent’s taxable estate.

As a fun aside for our Pennsylvania friends, Pennsylvania also has inheritance tax, which attaches to transfers made within a year of death with a $3,000 exemption per recipient.  So, the estate would still have to pay inheritance tax on the completed transfers, although the inheritance tax rates are nothing compared to the federal estate tax rates.

The estate planning lesson to be learned? Timing matters. If checks are written as part of the plan to minimize taxes, they must be deposited promptly to ensure they will be considered as gifts and reduce the taxable estate.  In all cases, it is better to have, and execute, a plan of action before trying to resolve taxes on your deathbed.

Reference: accounting WEB (Aug. 26,2022) “Tax Court Says When Deathbed Gifts Are Complete”

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