What are the big mistakes people make when
it comes to estate planning?
The biggest mistake is a misunderstanding of
beneficiary designations. Many assets today are transferred at death through a
beneficiary designation. Good examples of these assets are IRA rollovers, Roth
IRAs, life insurance policies, annuities, any kind of plan that we call a
qualified plan, meaning they're qualified for favorable income-tax treatment,
such as a 401(k).
People don't understand that getting those
designations right is extremely important. One thing I see, and I'll give this
a name, is unintentional disinheritance. It's very typical to see a beneficiary
designation that says, "To my spouse if he or she is living, otherwise to
my then-living children."
What's wrong with that?
If you say, "I give this to my then-living
children," and one of your children predeceases you, what happens to the
share that would have gone to that predeceased child? If your beneficiary
designation reads "to my then-living children," it goes to your true
surviving children. The share that would have gone to your grandchildren through
your child who is deceased is cut out. You may be disinheriting your
grandchildren.
That's probably not what most people want. If I ask
them that question, "If a child isn't living, where do you want those
assets to go?" they typically say, "Well, I want it to go to that
child's children." The Latin term for this is per stirpes, to the
descendants. So that would send it down the bloodline to the deceased child's
children.
Say you have a beneficiary designation
form for your 401(k) or some other asset and it doesn't allow for this level of
detail. What should you do?
Go to your plan administrator. I've seen documents
that specifically allow you to say if you want your assets to be distributed
per stirpes, and some of them have a box you have to check. Unfortunately,
there's no consistency within the financial-services industry. If the plan
administrator doesn't know how to handle it, you need to write your own
beneficiary designation that says "to my then-living children in equal
shares, except that if a child of mine is not living, the deceased child's
share is distributed, per stirpes, to that child's then-living
descendants."
What are the other pitfalls associated
with beneficiary designations?
Something I see among younger people is that they name
their spouse the beneficiary of their 401(k) plan, and when they have the first
child they change it to read, "And if my spouse isn't living, I give it to
little Suzie." But then comes little Johnny, and little Sally ... and
they don't change that beneficiary designation. So, 20 years down the road,
Suzie, the firstborn child, gets the entire account, because you haven't said,
"I give to my then-living children per stirpes." You've given it to
the person who's in your life at that time. So even if you have only one living
child at the time you make a beneficiary designation, you can still write it to
encompass future descendants.
And there's something else to be aware of in this
situation: You're naming little Suzie, who's two years old, the beneficiary of
your assets. That's a big issue in that someone who's two years old legally
cannot own assets. The solution if someone who's under 18 inherits assets is to
have a court-appointed guardian. But the minute you hear "court-appointed
guardian," you should see dollar signs. It's expensive to go to court to
get a guardian appointed and then have the court oversee those assets until the
child is 18 years old.
Instead of naming your children as beneficiaries if
they inherit assets and your spouse isn't living, maybe you would pay it to a
trust. And when it's paid to a trust, then the trustee takes over, and there is
usually no court accounting. And furthermore, you don't have to give it to
children at age 18 under the trust. You might get the kids through college and
working a few years before you start to give them money.
What are some other estate-planning
pitfalls?
One example relates to individuals with special needs
or disabilities. One of the worst things you can do is leave an inheritance
outright to such an individual. If an individual has his or her own resources,
then many public entitlements are either not available to them until they use
up their own resources, or if they receive an inheritance and they have been
receiving public resources, those governmental agencies have the right to take
those assets back for payment of benefits that they have already provided. The
solution is that you can draft your documents to set up a special needs trust
or supplemental needs trust. In this case, the money is left in a trust; it
does not go outright to this particular individual. The funds are managed by an
independent trustee who can pay for certain things--that's spelled out in the
trust agreement. The trust is set up in such a way that they are not considered
the assets of the disabled individual.
You can also use a trust in the case of adult children
with substance abuse problems. You can leave the assets in the trust that
specifies, "I want the child to get the dividends and interest," or
"I want to make sure that the child has a place to live, I want you to pay
for an apartment, and I want to make sure the child has enough to eat and
medical care."
Also, this is a case where I would not name the other
siblings as trustees; that creates issues between the siblings. There are
probably already hard feelings because mother or dad has bailed this one
sibling out time after time. That would be a very appropriate use of a
corporate fiduciary. It's a lot easier for someone sitting behind a desk in a
corporate office to say, "I'm sorry, that's all your mother said we were
permitted to do," than it is for a sibling to say that.
Then there are people who we call spendthrifts, with a
history of financial mismanagement. And they may have parents who have given
them money during crisis after crisis. And when you die, do you leave them half
a million dollars, assuming that suddenly they'll get on their feet? The trust
is an appropriate vehicle in this case, and even though the parents think
they're being mean to the child, they're really protecting the child.
When are the other times to set up a
trust?
Certainly when you have minor children. You don't want
a court to decide. And you know yourself when they should inherit assets. Think
about when you were comfortable managing assets, when you felt that you were
really making good financial decisions. Chances are, that's the age at which
you should start giving your children money. The other thing you could do
through a trust is parcel out the assets over a period of time. Say you give
the child half the assets at 25 but leave the other half in trust until they're
35. If they make some mistakes at 25, then at least it's not their entire
inheritance, it's only a part of their inheritance.
What are some underutilized
estate-planning maneuvers?
One thing that's easy to do, provided you have the
cash, is to gift. Every taxpayer can give $14,000 per year to as many
individuals as we want. So if you have three children, you can give each of
those children $14,000 in 2014--so that's $42,000 out of your estate.
It's also an opportunity to see how your children
would do with money they didn't have to work for. You do this a couple of years
and you see some vacations and new cars ... it's kind of a good way to test the
waters of fiscal responsibility.
Another provision in the gift tax law states that, in
addition to making these $14,000 annual gifts, we can all write checks directly
for medical and/or education, and there is no limit. So when your grandchild is
headed off to college, the first semester's tuition is $30,000, grandpa can
write a check to the treasurer of the college. Such gifts would be free of gift
tax.
Another technique that I think is underutilized is
using IRA rollover accounts, 401(k) accounts, any so-called qualified
retirement account, as the device to make charitable gifts at death.
The IRA is the one account where you've not paid
income tax. So at some point, you're going to have to pay tax when you start
taking money out, or your beneficiaries are going to have to start paying income
taxes when they take it out. But charities don't pay income tax. So leave to
your family those assets that you've already paid income tax on, and use your
qualified retirement accounts for charitable gifts at death.
Written by Brent F. Dille, Esq.
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