Leaving Inheritance To Children Easier Said Than Done
Deciding whether to leave an inheritance for your children impacts the amount you save, the retirement plans you choose and how you take qualified retirement plan distributions. However, beyond your desire to leave some wealth to your children (or not), there are some essential personal financial issues to consider.
Consider Your Own Income Needs
Some retirees mistakenly give their retirement savings away without considering their own income needs. Before you make gifts to others, it’s important to assess how much to spend on yourself. Retirement calculators such as those available at Dinkytown.net can help you determine how much you need to save and how much you can withdraw each year once you retire.
Be sure to take into account the impact of inflation and taxes and maintain a diversified portfolio of growth and income investments that can help your portfolio keep pace with inflation.
Plan for Rising Healthcare Costs
The biggest risks to your retirement income and your children’s inheritance are unexpected illness and high healthcare costs. Government programs are often of little assistance when it comes to paying for nursing homes and other forms of long-term medical care. Medicare covers nursing-home stays for a very limited period of time, and Medicaid requires that you spend almost all of your own money before it pays for long-term care. You cannot simply transfer assets to family members to qualify for Medicaid, as the program restricts benefits if asset transfers were made several years prior to a nursing-home stay.
Some people protect their assets from the costs of catastrophic illness with a long-term care insurance policy, which can be purchased either individually, through an insurance agent, or through a group plan with an employer. However, these policies are very expensive and have a number of coverage limitations, so you should consider them carefully.
What if you outlive your retirement fund? When you are over 90 years old, your children and grandchildren may celebrate every birthday gratefully. But if you have spent your nest egg they may also be paying some or all of your bills. With longer life expectancies, it’s important to try to manage retirement-plan withdrawals to avoid depleting assets during your lifetime.
If you expect to inherit assets from your parents, you may be in a better position financially than someone who does not expect to receive an inheritance. Keep in mind that certain inherited assets, such as stocks and mutual funds, are eligible for favorable tax treatment called a step-up in basis. If you are leaving assets to others, this tax treatment could mean significant savings for heirs.
Set Up a Trust
In certain situations, it may make sense to set up a trust to control distributions from the estate to the surviving spouse and children. If you or your spouse have children from previous relationships and you don’t have a prenuptial agreement, trusts can ensure that specific assets are passed to designated children. (You can also reach such an agreement after marriage).
Children who are well off may prefer that you keep every penny of your nest egg rather than distribute it during your lifetime. Discuss the transfer of your estate with them.
Choose Investments Wisely
Those with very large estates may expect children to pass inherited assets to grandchildren. A portfolio designed to last multiple generations grows, preserves capital and generates income with investments like growth and income equities and a portfolio of laddered bonds. Inheritors who wish an estate to last several generations should withdraw income only and avoid dipping into principal.
Estimate the amount of inheritance you will leave to your children by considering inflation as well as years of compounded investment growth.
How to Leave Your Legacy
Below are some possible ways to share your wealth with others:
Gift Assets
Gifting assets is one way to allow loved ones to make use of your money while you are still alive. Gifts qualifying for the annual exclusion from gift tax – often called “annual exclusion gifts” – are completely tax free and do not require filing a gift tax return.
A separate annual exclusion applies to each person to whom you make a gift. As of 2010, the annual exclusion is $13,000. While gift recipients will not receive a step-up in cost basis, any capital gains will be taxed at their applicable rate, which may be lower than yours.
Some people gift to children or grandchildren using custodial accounts set up under the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) or Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA). However, depending on a recipient’s earned income and status as a student, the earnings in the account may be taxed at the donor’s rather than the child’s tax rate. Others simply open a joint account with the minor child or buy savings bonds in a child’s name.
Bequests made to charities are not subject to any limitations and are deductible from ordinary income.
Trusts protect your children’s interests, and the assets in them avoid probate (which maintains privacy). You can appoint a trust company or knowledgeable person as trustee to manage assets and control distributions from the trust.
An irrevocable trust is considered a gift, so you can’t control it or take it back. With a revocable living trust, however, you own and control the assets while you are alive, then they pass to beneficiaries as part of your estate.
With life insurance, your beneficiaries receive the proceeds tax-free, without having to go through probate or worrying about stock market fluctuations. Fixed or variable annuities allow you to participate in the stock market through mutual funds or fixed-income investments and also have a life insurance component. However, these policies often carry hidden charges and fees so it’s important to shop around and study them carefully.
Make sure you take care of the legal details to ensure your estate plan will work the way you want it to.Beneficiaries
- Review the beneficiaries on all accounts.
- Changing beneficiaries may require your spouse’s consent.
- List secondary beneficiaries in case your primary beneficiary dies before you.
- Your retirement accounts pass to beneficiaries without going through probate court, but if you leave a retirement account to your estate, it may have to go through probate before the assets can be distributed.
Probate
- Know the probate laws in your state.
- Investment accounts without a joint owner or documented beneficiary may have to go through probate to change ownership, a potentially long and costly process
Wills
- Draw up a will.
- Dying without a will (called “dying intestate”) means that state law determines how your investments are divided among relatives.
- If you have no living relatives and no will, your assets escheat back to your state of residence.
Conclusion
The above suggestions may not be right for everyone, so it’s important to consult an attorney or tax advisor to determine which make the most sense for you. Evaluating distribution options for your nest egg will help ensure your wishes are followed while maximizing flexibility for your heirs.