RESOURCES HUB newsletter Cheap Tricks
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Cheap Tricks

Cheap tricks (and we
don’t mean the rock band from the 70s) can be used to accomplish some pretty
significant estate and other planning goals.  Here’s a survey of some
cheap steps you can take that might just save you a bundle:

529 Plans:

These popular college
savings plans have shortcomings that don’t get talked about (hey they might
detract a broker from making a sale). When you set up a plan you have to
designate the “account holder”. This is the person who can make
investment decisions and pull money out of the plan. Few people bother
designating a successor account holder, and the consequences can be costly and
problematic. If you set up a 529 Plan for say a grandchild and die, here’s what
might happen. The ownership of your account will pass on your death to the
executor of your estate. Think about that if you’re an OB-GYN worried about
malpractice claims! From your estate the account will pass by bequest or
operation of law. Not what you had planned.

Cheap Trick: Designate a
successor account owner. You avoid the complexity, administrative costs, and
potentially worse problems.

Elderly or Ailing Family:

Keeping an eye on an
ailing parent or other family member is time consuming and potentially costly.
Use personal emergency response systems, sensors to monitor sleep patterns,
stoves, etc. (see www.quietcare.com). Video on line chat has become popular
(see www.get.live.com). Medication reminder products and services are growing
(see www.epill.com). What about finances?

Cheap Trick: To help
keep an eye on an elderly parent’s finances, consolidate all accounts to one
major institution or wealth manager and then have a duplicate copy of each
month’s statement mailed to you. At no cost you can quickly eyeball each
month’s activity to be sure nothing untoward is happening.

Keeping Your Agent
Honest
:

If your capacity is
diminishing, you may have to rely on Junior to handle your finances as an agent
under your power of attorney. We know junior is a good boy and would never use
your bank account for his own benefit. But abuses abound and my mom always taught
me that you’re better off “safe than sorry”.

Cheap Trick: Use the
same trick above to protect you. Have a close friend who is not an agent under
your power of attorney get a duplicate monthly statement. That will enable the
friend to keep tabs on you and inform family if an issue arises. It will also
enable your friend to keep tabs on Junior if he takes over your accounts as
your agent as she’ll see all his activities. You probably should mandate in
your power of attorney that the agent must continue to send the friend (or a
named successor) duplicate copies of each monthly statement. If Junior decides
to buy a new fully decked out Hummer (necessary to drive errands for you!) it
will likely be a large enough withdrawal on your account that your friend can
blow the whistle on Junior.

Custodian Accounts:

Why people continue to
set up custodian accounts is not really clear. Trusts give you much better
control. 529 Plans give you much better tax breaks (especially now that the
Kiddie Tax applies until a child is over age 18). But if you still have
custodian accounts for your heirs be aware that if you are the named custodian,
on your death the entire account balance is included in your estate. Ouch!

Cheap Trick: Name a
different custodian and remove your name. No cost. Estate tax problem solved.

Home Equity Lines:

Getting in place a large
unused home equity line is a great way to assure another source of cash in an
emergency. It’s a commonly recommended planning step. But if you’re disabled,
will the bank let your agent draw down on the line? Probably not.

Cheap Trick: Arrange a
home equity line that has a checkbook so your agent can write checks without
having to go back to the lender for approval that won’t be forthcoming. Have
your power of attorney expressly grant the agent rights to draw down on the
line of credit and indemnify the bank. A less cheap trick would be to have your
house held by a revocable living trust (maybe not a bad idea for other reasons)
and have the line of credit in the name of the trust. That way, the successor
trustees won’t need any different approval since they will be acting on behalf
of the trust.

Foreign Resident with
U.S. Will
:

So you’re a United
States citizen but you live abroad and all of your assets are abroad. You’re still
subject to U.S. estate tax on your assets (its part of the love our government
shows all it citizens). So you have a will prepared by your estate planner.
Which state has authority to probate that will? You might not have any
connections to a particular state (especially if you don’t have a pied-a-terre
here).

Cheap Trick: Open a bank
account in the state in which you believe probate should occur and state in
your will your intent for the laws of that state to govern and probate to be
addressed in that state. Pick a state with a simpler probate process. Check
state law first, a bank account may not be enough in some states.

Insurance Trusts:

Irrevocable Life
Insurance Trusts (ILITs) are commonly used to own insurance policies to protect
the proceeds from tax, misuse and other risks. If you own an existing policy
and transfer it to an ILIT you establish, if you die within three years of the
transfer the insurance proceeds will be included in your estate. However, you
might be able to offset some of this by arguing that to the extent that
insurance premium were paid by the trust after the policy was transferred in,
that payment triggers a rule that the amount included in your taxable estate is
only a pro-rata portion of what would otherwise be included  (IRC Section
2042). The amount included would be argued to be based on the pro-rata portion
of the total premiums paid. 

Cheap Trick: If you
transfer a policy hoping you will live for three years (3 year rule), leverage
the strategy by having the trust as the new
owner pay a premium so
that the trust will own a pro-rata (based on premiums paid), portion of the
policy. You can take this planning even further. Consider also having the trust
as the new owner
repay you as the
transferor of the policy for some or all of the premiums you previously paid.
This will increase the portion of premiums paid by the trust as compared to you
and arguably remove more of the insurance proceeds from your taxable estate. No
new legal documents or fees, just a check written by the trustee to you.

Guardians:

Naming a guardian is
probably the toughest estate planning decision. In many cases you may prefer
that your child be raised in an intact home so you’ll name your sister and her
husband, Jane and Atilla as guardians. But if Atilla runs off to
besiege Constantinoplewho is the
guardian?

 

Cheap
Trick: Don’t name a couple as guardians. Instead name Jane so long as she is
married to Atilla on the date of your death. If they are divorced, the next
named guardian will come into play. You also avoid the issue of a legal battle
between Jane and Atilla as to who should be the guardian.

Grandchildren Gifts:
To make large gifts to grandchildren raises a host of complex tax issues. Gifts
in excess of $12,000 per year, or direct payments for tuition and medical
expenses, are subject to gift and generation skipping transfer
(“GST”) tax. Once the $1 million gift tax exclusion is used up the
costs are significant. If your GST exemption were used up, the costs would be
confiscatory. Thus, to make larger gifts to grandchildren (and even for the
annual $12,000 gifts to protect them) many grandparents opt for trusts.
However, trusts raise a number of complexities. Gifts to trusts cannot qualify
for the annual GST exclusion merely by using the Crummey powers that are so
commonly used to qualify gifts to trusts for the annual gift tax exclusion.
There are several additional requirements that must be met to qualify for the
GST annual exclusion. The trust should be for only one beneficiary and if the
beneficiary dies the trust assets must be included in the grandchild’s
estate. 

Cheap Trick: Make advance payments of tuition for all your grandchildren and
great grandchildren for all future years. If they’re all in private schools,
the amount you can transfer is huge. No tax. No legal fees. Simple. There are a
few catches to make this work. You must pay the tuition directly to the
schools. The schools must be qualified educational institutions (IRC
170(b)(1)(A)(ii)). You must have an agreement with the schools that the tuition
payments cannot be refunded. If Junior goes AWOL, you loose the tuition
prepayments. LTR 200602002. The impact of this is huge. If grandma has a $2.5 million
estate, a series of gifts to the schools for all grandchildren and
great-grandchildren could solve her entire estate tax problem and even avoid
the need to file an estate tax return. The only ones that loose out in this
deal is grandma’s attorney and accountant.

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