Planning Briefs
Why Turn Down An Inheritance?
Published Tuesday, July 18, 2017 at: 7:00 AM EDT
Sometimes you just have to say no, even when it might benefit you financially. Suppose you're in line to receive an inheritance—shouldn't you welcome it with open arms? In some cases there can be good reasons to turn down the money, using a "qualified disclaimer."
Why would you ever not take an inheritance? The best reason is to save your family money on taxes. By using a qualified disclaimer, the assets bypass your estate and go to the next beneficiary or beneficiaries. This enables you to preserve your personal estate tax exemption to use in other ways. In addition, in many states a disclaimer may be used to avoid claims of creditors.
The combined personal exemption for estate and gift taxes is $5.49 million in 2017, an amount that is indexed to inflation and normally increases every year. That gives most people plenty of wiggle room. But for those whose wealth exceeds that amount or who have already used up part of the exemption, estate and gift taxes may still be a major concern. In addition, most money you might want to transfer to grandchildren will be subject to the generation-skipping transfer tax (GSTT). The GSTT exemption is the same as the estate and gift tax exemption.
© 2024 Advisor Products Inc. All Rights Reserved.
More articles
- Q's And A's About Financial Aid
- Five Retirement Questions To Answer
- Getting A High Tax Grade For Higher Education Credits
- Five Steps When You Inherit Assets
- How Now, Dow Jones Industrials?
- Don't Be Caught Red-Handed By The Wash Sale Rule
- How You Can Manage Risk Aversion
- Taking Socially Responsible Investing To The Next Level
- One Last Shot At A Tax Exemption
- Sowing Tax Seeds For Capital Gains
- Tax Reform Outlook: Cloudy, With A Chance Of A Law
- Trust As IRA Beneficiary: Not Crazy
- When To Disclaim An Inherited IRA
- Sticking With The Fundamentals
- Grandparents Can Become Big Spenders For Their Offspring