Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Donor's Remorse

Now that 2010 finally ended and Congress finally acted with respect to the estate and gift tax, a lot of gift and estate tax lawyers and their clients are trying to figure out how to reverse taxable gifts they made in 2010. It's a classic case of "it seemed like a good idea at the time." And it did.

This was the situation: In 2010 there was no estate tax. It was scheduled to return in 2011, but with only a $1 million exemption, as opposed to the $3.5 million exemption that existed in 2009, and at a 55% tax rate. To avoid a 55% tax on estates over the $1 million exemption, many estate and gift tax lawyers advised their clients to make taxable gifts in 2010. The reasoning was, the gift tax is only 35%. Better to save 20% in taxes by making a gift now than risking dying in 2011 or after.

But in January, Congress amended the tax code to provide for a $5 million exemption ($10 million for couples) and imposed only a 35% tax rate. Now, many of those people who made taxable gifts last year are realizing that they could have avoided any tax simply by waiting. For those with estates between $1 million and $5 million, this is certainly true. So they and their attorneys are scrambling to see if there is a way to undo the gifts they made last year.

This is a classic case of people ignoring the sage advice my tax professor gave in law school: Never do anything solely for the tax consequences. Do something that makes sense from a business standpoint and deal with the tax issue at that time. The people who made taxable gifts in 2010 did so solely in hopes of avoiding a possible estate tax.

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