By Brent F. Dille,
Esq.
If
your spouse isn’t a United States citizen, some special legal rules may affect
your estate planning. But for the most part, you can proceed just as if your
spouse were a citizen.
Basic Estate Planning
When
it comes to the basic estate planning steps that just about everyone should
take, it doesn’t matter whether or not you or your spouse are citizens. Both of
you should:
- Make wills or living trusts to leave
assets that you have in the United States.
- Name
beneficiaries for your retirement
accounts.
- Make durable powers
of attorney for finances and for health care.
Can Noncitizens Inherit Property?
One
threshold question you may have is simply whether you can leave property to
someone who isn’t a U.S. citizen. The answer is yes; noncitizens can inherit
property just as citizens can. So when you make your will or living trust, or
name beneficiaries for your retirement accounts or life insurance policies,
there is no problem with naming your noncitizen spouse.
Federal Estate & Gift Tax: The
Rules for Spouses
Most
people don’t need to worry about the federal gift and estate tax, which affects only
very wealthy families. For deaths in 2016, only those who leave more than $5.45
million are potentially subject to the tax. Married couples can leave a total
of twice that amount tax-free.
How
it works.
The tax is imposed on transfers of property both during life and at death. The
tax rate is the same in both circumstances. Because the exemption amount is so
high, very few families pay the tax. It isn’t collected until after the
surviving spouse’s death, when the value of all property the surviving spouse
gave away or left is totaled up.
Assets Left at Death
Assets
left to a surviving spouse are not
subject to federal estate tax, no matter how much they are worth—IF the surviving spouse is a U.S.
citizen. This rule is called the unlimited marital deduction. It is in addition
to the individual exemption that everyone gets.
The
marital deduction, however, does not
apply when the spouse who inherits isn’t a U.S. citizen, even if the
spouse is a permanent U.S. resident. The federal government doesn’t want
someone who isn’t a citizen to inherit a large amount of money, pay no estate
tax, and then leave the country to return to his or her native land.
Still,
keep in mind you can leave assets worth up to the exempt amount (again, $5.45
million in 2016) to anyone, including your noncitizen spouse, without owing any
federal estate tax. And if the noncitizen spouse dies first, assets left to the
spouse who is a U.S. citizen do qualify for the unlimited marital deduction.
Gifts Given During Life
If
your spouse is a citizen, any gifts you give to him or her during your life are
free of federal gift tax. If your spouse is not a U.S. citizen, however, the
special tax-free treatment for spouses is limited to $148,000 a year (in 2016).
This amount is indexed for inflation. That’s in addition to the amount you can
give away or leave to any recipient without owing federal gift/estate tax.
Postponing or Avoiding Federal Estate
Tax
If
you have so much money that you are worried about estate tax, there are two
main strategies to consider.
Get Citizenship
If
your spouse becomes a U.S.
citizen
by the time your estate’s federal estate tax return is due, he or she will
qualify for the unlimited marital deduction. The return is generally due nine
months after death, but the IRS may grant a six-month extension. Because it takes
a long time to get citizenship—for most people, there is a waiting period
before you can apply, and it takes at least several months after you apply—this
isn’t an option for most people.
Use a QDOT Trust
Your
noncitizen spouse can inherit from you free of estate tax if you use a special trust, called a
"qualified domestic trust" or QDOT. (Internal Revenue Code section
2056A.) You leave property to the trust, instead of directly to your spouse.
Your spouse is the beneficiary of the trust; there can’t be any other
beneficiaries while your spouse is alive. Your spouse receives income that the
trust property generates; these amounts are not subject to estate tax.
If
trust assets themselves (principal) are distributed to your spouse, however,
the estate tax will probably have to be paid on that property. (There’s an
exception when distributions are made because the spouse has an urgent,
immediate need and no other resources.)
A
QDOT must be established, and the property must be transferred to it, by the
time the estate tax return of the deceased spouse is due. Usually, it’s set up
while both spouses are alive, and comes into existence when the citizen spouse
dies. The trustee—that is, the person or entity in charge of trust assets—must
be a U.S. citizen or a U.S. corporation such as a bank or trust company.
As always, if you
have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact one of our experienced
estate planning attorneys.
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