Estate tax proposal would maintain current exemptions

What’s the future of the estate tax after 2009? This is a question that your clients have probably been asking a lot lately because the estate tax is scheduled to sunset in 2010 and then rise again like a phoenix in 2011 at higher tax rates and with a substantially lower unified exemption credit equivalent, or estate tax exemption, of $1 million.
APR 28, 2009
Situation: What’s the future of the estate tax after 2009? This is a question that your clients have probably been asking a lot lately because the estate tax is scheduled to sunset in 2010 and then rise again like a phoenix in 2011 at higher tax rates and with a substantially lower unified exemption credit equivalent, or estate tax exemption, of $1 million. Solution: Here are the facts. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus recently announced proposed legislation that covers changes to estate tax as well as income tax and alternative minimum tax. The estate tax changes in the Taxpayer Certainty and Relief Act of 2009 are a significant part of the proposed legislation. The proposal includes making permanent the 2009 estate tax exemption of $3.5 million for an individual for 2010 and beyond. The gift tax and the generation-skipping transfer tax would be unified with the estate tax. The exemptions for a couple would be double these amounts. For example, the estate tax exemption for a married couple would be $7 million. The proposed legislation provides for inflation indexing of the exemptions for the estate tax, generation-skipping tax and gift tax in $10,000 increments beginning in 2011. The top estate tax rate would be fixed at 45% as under current law. The proposal would make the unused portion of the estate tax exemption of a deceased spouse to a surviving spouse portable. For example, if a husband and wife each had a $3.5 million estate tax exemption, then any unused portion of the $3.5 million estate tax exemption from the first to die would be portable by election and used by the surviving spouse in addition to their $3.5 million exemption. The proposed legislation also provides for an increase in the special-use valuation method for certain farms and small businesses to equal the estate tax exemption of $3.5 million effective after Dec. 31.

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