Previous | Tax Law Changes: A closer look at corporate taxes Next | Keeping your personal information safe this holiday season
October 12, 2021 / Erin Sunday
Tax Law Changes: A closer look at estate and gift taxes

Tax Law Changes: A closer look at estate and gift taxes

Part three of our four-part series on 2021 tax law changes is a topic that might not impact everyone, but if it does impact you, it’s important to understand what changes are in store. The topic at hand is proposed estate and gift taxes.

Check out some of the proposed changes below, followed by a discussion of how you can use Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts (SLATs) to your advantage.

Estate and Gift Tax Changes

  • The current 2021 gift and estate tax exemption is $11.7 million for each U.S. citizen. The Biden administration’s plan would lower that tax exemption amount to $3.5 million, meaning all gifts and estates more than that value would be required to pay estate taxes. The House Ways and Means Committee has proposed lowering the tax exemption amount to approximately $6.02 million in 2022.
  • Increase the top estate tax rate from 40% to 45%. This tax will be applied to estates that exceed $11.7 million in value (or $3.5 million/$6.02 million under the new proposals). The estate tax traditionally impacts only a small percentage of families. According to a Bloomberg report, in 2019 (the last year data is available), fewer than one in every 1,000 people who died had an estate on which taxes had to be paid.Hands passing a house to another set of hands
  • The portability of estate tax exemption to surviving spouses is expected to continue.
  • An elimination of step-up in basis was proposed by the Biden administration but the House Ways and Means Committee has omitted this from their proposal.


Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts

  • Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts — or SLATs — are an estate-planning strategy that could reduce estate tax burdens. A SLAT is an irrevocable trust created by one spouse for the benefit of the other. The grantor, or “donor spouse,” uses their current gift tax exemption to make a gift to the SLAT, and the “beneficiary spouse” is named as a current beneficiary.
  • While the donor spouse gives up his or her right to the property transferred into the trust, the beneficiary spouse maintains access to that same property.
  • Some families allow only the beneficiary spouse to access funds during his or her lifetime, while children and grandchildren benefit after the beneficiary spouse’s death. Still other families structure SLATs to permit distributions to the beneficiary spouse and children simultaneously.
  • Assets that may appreciate in the future would be an optimal candidate for transfer. For example, if you transfer an asset worth $1 million today to a SLAT, and in five years that asset grows to $3 million, that appreciation is also outside of your taxable estate, even though you only used $1 million of your exemption amount. If the assets in the SLAT are not distributed to the beneficiary spouse, they may continue to grow free of estate and gift taxes while remaining available for the next generation.


For more information about estate planning or how a SLAT could benefit you, contact us.

Erin Sunday is the Vice President, Investment & Trust Services Relationship Manager at F&M Trust.

Recent Articles
Keeping your personal information safe this holiday season
Keeping your personal information safe this holiday season

Keeping your personal information safe this holiday season

November 29, 2024 / Dave Long

How merchant services can help small businesses
How merchant services can help small businesses

How merchant services can help small businesses

November 19, 2024 / Cynthia Marconi

Cell phones are a target for scammers
Cell phones are a target for scammers

Cell phones are a target for scammers

November 12, 2024 / Ray Wills

Saving and investing tips for veterans
Saving and investing tips for veterans

Saving and investing tips for veterans

November 05, 2024 / U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Preparing to rent your first apartment
Preparing to rent your first apartment

Preparing to rent your first apartment

October 24, 2024 / Zach Hendricks

When it’s time to manage your parents’ finances
When it’s time to manage your parents’ finances

When it’s time to manage your parents’ finances

October 17, 2024 / Alyssa Proctor

The importance of special needs trusts
The importance of special needs trusts

The importance of special needs trusts

October 10, 2024 / Erin Sunday

How to safely use digital banking
How to safely use digital banking

How to safely use digital banking

October 03, 2024 / Ray Wills

It’s never too early to save for the holidays
It’s never too early to save for the holidays

It’s never too early to save for the holidays

September 26, 2024 / Pheonix Gilbert

Join our e-newsletter

Sign up for our e-newsletter to get new content each month.

NOTICE: YOU ARE LEAVING F&M TRUST!

You are now leaving the F&M Trust website. Links to third-party sites are provided for your convenience. Such sites are not within our control and may not follow the same privacy, security or accessibility standards as ours. F&M Trust neither endorses nor guarantees offerings of the third-party providers, nor is F&M Trust responsible for the security, content or availability of third-party sites, their partners or advertisers.