Team photo
Centuria Financial Group

David P. McCabe,

WMCP®, ChFC®, CLU®

Financial Planner

david.mccabe@prudential.com

 

Nathaniel D. High, RICP®

Financial Planner

nathaniel.high@prudential.com

 

Nicholas J. Over, CFP®

Financial Planner

nicholas.over@prudential.com

 

Sara E. Martin

Operations Manager

sara.martin@prudential.com

 

Jennifer A. McCabe

Client Service Specialist

jennifer.mccabe@prudential.com

 

Centuria Financial Group

2333 Baltimore Blvd Suite B

Finksburg, MD 21048

 

Phone:  443-952-7232

September/October 2024

Minimize The Estate Tax Bit with an IDGT

Real estate investment, Buy, own, and sell properties for profit. Cash flow, appreciation, tax advantages. Research, strategy, Real estate investment yields financial rewards. real estate market

The current favorable estate tax exemption amount is scheduled to expire on December 31, 2025, unless Congress acts to extend it or make it permanent. Without action, the exemption amount will revert from $13.61 to $5.6 million per individual, adjusted for inflation. If this could impact you, consider transferring assets out of your estate starting now. With this in mind, this issue begins a series of trust strategies that may help minimize estate tax.


Short Definition
Intentionally defective grantor trusts (IDTs) can transfer wealth to beneficiaries while minimizing estate tax, however the grantor continues to pay income taxes on transferred assets.


Setting It Up
Using your available lifetime estate-and gift-tax exclusion, you, the grantor, irrevocably transfer assets you expect to appreciate to the IDGT with no federal gift-tax consequences. Be aware that after the transfer, you can no longer financially benefit from those assets. If the value of the gift exceeds your available tax exclusion, you may sell the asset to the trust on an installment sale basis for a long-term note (say 20 years) and incur no capital gains due to the trust’s irrevocable status. As the assets held in the trust value grow, estate tax on the growth may be avoided for multiple generations.


Intentionally defective grantor trusts (IDGT) aren’t for every high-net-worth individual. Your trusted tax and legal professionals can determine if one might be appropriate for you.

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David P. McCabe, Nathaniel D. High, and Nicholas J. Over are Financial Planners with, and offer securities and investment advisory service through LPL Enterprise (LPLE), a Registered Investment Advisor, Member FINRA/SIPC, and an affiliate of LPL Financial.
LPLE and LPL Financial are not affiliated with Centuria Financial Group.
This newsletter is general educational information provided by a Prudential Financial Professional and is not intended to market or sell any specific products and services, but rather provide general information about the subject matter covered only.
Centuria Financial Group and LTM Marketing Specialists LLC are unrelated companies. This publication was prepared for the publication’s provider by LTM Client Marketing, an unrelated third party. Articles are not written or produced by the named representative.

The information and opinions contained in this web site are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but their accuracy cannot be guaranteed. The publishers assume no responsibility for errors and omissions or for any damages resulting from the use of the published information. This web site is published with the understanding that it does not render legal, accounting, financial, or other professional advice. Whole or partial reproduction of this web site is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher.