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L E G AC Y


STEPPING UP


Why capital gains taxes have become more important to estate planning


W


ITH THE U.S. estate-tax exemption now sitting at $5.43 million per individual — $10.86 million for married couples — some affl uent families are turning their attention to another kind of tax: capital gains.


Only two in every 1,000 estates now pays the federal estate tax


since Congress raised the individual exemption amount signifi cantly in the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA), according to recent estimates from the Joint Committee on Taxation.1


Conversely, the top capital gains tax rate increased from 15% to 20% under ATRA and now applies to more taxpayers.


REDUCING THE IMPACT To minimize their capital gains tax obligations, some families are taking advantage of “step-up” basis rules that allow them to adjust the cost basis of appreciated assets when they pass along those assets as an inheritance. The rules effectively allow heirs to avoid paying capital gains taxes on the appreciation of assets that occurred before they inherited them. In practice, the rules encourage taxpayers to hold on to real


estate, stock and other appreciated assets until their death rather than selling those assets during their lifetime, saysTerisa Heine, a Regions Trust Advisor. “For those assets that have increased in value significantly, it can make sense to hold them until death, so you receive that step-up,” she says. Here’s how step-up rules work: Assume that years ago you


purchased 1,000 shares of stock at $1 a share. The value of each share has since jumped to $100, making the investment now worth $100,000. If you sell the stock while you’re alive, you would pay capital gains tax on $99,000 — the $100,000 sales price minus your $1,000 investment. At a 20% capital gains tax rate, the tax bill would come to almost $20,000. However, if you keep the shares and bequeath them in your


will, your heirs’ cost basis would “step up” to the fair market value at the date of death. So if they inherit the stock at $100 per share and later sell it at $105 per share, the capital gains tax would apply to only the $5 per share of appreciation.


THE SPECIFICS Step-up rules can be used with various assets, including stocks, bonds, real estate and businesses. They typically don’t apply to assets held in retirement accounts, such as 401(k) plans or IRAs, Heine says. Moreover, assets placed in trusts don’t automatically qualify for step-up rules, but individuals can work with a trust


14 R EG ION S I N S IG H T S  SUMMER 2 015


advisor to structure a trust in a way that allows them to qualify, she adds. The application of step-up rules


can also vary by state. In states with community property laws that require all marital assets be divided equally between spouses, when one spouse passes away, the other spouse’s cost basis of any assets is often the fair market value on the date of the deceased spouse’s death. So, in that scenario, if a couple purchased a home for $100,000 that’s now worth $1 million, the surviving spouse’s basis would be $1 million. In states without community


property laws, generally just the decedent’s portion of the assets is stepped up. In the above example, the cost basis of the deceased spouse’s portion of the home would be stepped


PHOTO: PAUL BRADBURY


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