In REG-106706-18 the
IRS has issued proposed regulations that provide that individuals taking
advantage of the increased gift and estate tax exclusion amounts in effect from
2018 to 2025, as provided for by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), will not be adversely
impacted after 2025 when the exclusion amount is scheduled to drop to pre-2018
levels.
Background
In
computing the amount of Federal gift tax to be paid on a gift or the amount of
Federal estate tax to be paid at death, the gift and estate tax provisions of
the Internal Revenue Code (Code) apply a unified rate schedule to the
taxpayer’s cumulative taxable gifts and taxable estate on death to arrive at a
net tentative tax. The net tentative tax then is reduced by a credit based on
the applicable exclusion amount (AEA), which is the sum of the basic exclusion
amount (BEA) within the meaning of section 2010(c)(3) of the Code and, if
applicable, the deceased spousal unused exclusion (DSUE) amount within the
meaning of section 2010(c)(4). In certain cases, the AEA also includes a
restored exclusion amount.
Prior
to January 1, 2018, for estates of decedents dying and gifts made beginning in
2011, section 2010(c)(3) provided a BEA of $5 million, indexed for inflation after
2011. The credit is applied first against the gift tax, on a cumulative basis,
as taxable gifts are made. To the extent that any credit remains at death, it
is applied against the estate tax.
Section
11061 of the TCJA amended section 2010(c)(3) to provide that, for decedents
dying and gifts made after December 31, 2017, and before January 1, 2026, the
BEA is increased by $5 million to $10 million as adjusted for inflation
(increased BEA). On January 1, 2026, the BEA will revert to $5 million. Thus,
an individual or the individual’s estate may utilize the increased BEA to
shelter from gift and estate taxes an additional $5 million of transfers made
during the eight-year period beginning on January 1, 2018, and ending on
December 31, 2025 (increased BEA period).
Section
11061 of the TCJA also added section 2001(g)(2) to the Code, which, in addition
to the necessary or appropriate regulatory authority granted in section
2010(c)(6) for purposes of section 2010(c), directs the Secretary to prescribe
such regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out section 2001
with respect to any difference between the BEA applicable at the time of the
decedent’s death and the BEA applicable with respect to any gifts made by the
decedent.
Given
the cumulative nature of the gift and estate tax computations and the differing
manner in which the credit is applied against these two taxes, there are several
questions regarding a potential for inconsistent tax treatment or double
taxation of transfers resulting from the temporary nature of the increased BEA.
Analysis
·
First, in cases in which a taxpayer exhausted
his or her BEA and paid gift tax on a pre-2018 gift, and then either makes an
additional gift or dies during the increased BEA period, will the increased BEA
be absorbed by the pre-2018 gift on which gift tax was paid so as to deny the
taxpayer the full benefit of the increased BEA during the increased BEA period?
§ The
IRS’s response is that the gift tax determination appropriately reduces the
increased BEA only by the amount of BEA allowable against prior period gifts,
thereby ensuring that the increased BEA is not reduced by a prior gift on which
gift tax in fact was paid.
·
Second, in cases in which a taxpayer made a
gift during the increased BEA period that was fully sheltered from gift tax by
the increased BEA but makes a gift or dies after the increased BEA period has
ended, will the gift that was exempt from gift tax when made during the
increased BEA period have the effect of increasing the gift or estate tax on
the later transfer (in effect, subjecting the earlier gift to tax even though
it was exempt from gift tax when made)?
§ The
IRS responded by ruling the only time that the increased BEA enters into the
computation of the estate tax is when the credit on the amount of BEA allowable
in the year of the decedent’s death is netted against the tentative estate tax,
which in turn already has been reduced by the hypothetical gift tax on the full
amount of all post-1976 taxable gifts (whether or not gift tax was paid). Thus,
the increased BEA is not reduced by the portion of any prior gift on which gift
tax was paid, and the full amount of the increased BEA is available to compute
the credit against the estate tax.
·
The third situation considered is whether the
gift tax on a gift made after the increased BEA period is inflated by a
theoretical gift tax on a gift made during the increased BEA period that was
sheltered from gift tax when made. If so, this would effectively reverse the
benefit of the increased BEA available for gifts made during the increased BEA
period. This issue arises in the case of donors who both made one or more gifts
during the increased BEA period that were sheltered from gift tax by the
increased BEA in effect during those years, and made a post-2025 gift. The
concern raised is whether the gift tax determination on the post-2025 gift will
treat the gifts made during the increased BEA period as gifts not sheltered
from gift tax by the credit on the BEA, given that the post-2025 gift tax
determination is based on the BEA then in effect, rather than on the increased
BEA.
§ The
IRS responded by ruling the gift tax from prior periods includes the gift tax
attributable to the gifts made during the increased BEA period. In this way,
the full amount of the gift tax liability on the increased BEA period gifts is
removed from the computation, regardless of whether that liability was
sheltered from gift tax by the BEA or was satisfied by a gift tax payment. All
that remains is the tentative gift tax on the donor’s current gift. Even if the
sum of the credits allowable for prior periods exceeds the credit based on the
BEA in the current (post-2025) year, the tax on the current gift cannot exceed
the tentative tax on that gift and thus will not be improperly inflated. The
gift tax determination anticipates and avoids this situation, but no credit
will be available against the tentative tax on the post-2025 gift.
·
The fourth situation considered is whether, for
estate tax purposes, a gift made during the increased BEA period that was
sheltered from gift tax by the increased BEA inflates a post-2025 estate tax
liability. This will be the case if the estate tax computation fails to treat
such gifts as sheltered from gift tax, in effect reversing the benefit of the
increased BEA available for those gifts. This issue arises in the case of estates
of decedents who both made gifts during the increased BEA period that were
sheltered from gift tax by the increased BEA in effect during those years, and
die after 2025. The concern raised is whether the estate tax computation treats
the gifts made during the increased BEA period as post-1976 taxable gifts not
sheltered from gift tax by the credit on the BEA, given that the post-2025
estate tax computation is based on the BEA in effect at the decedent’s death
rather than the BEA in effect on the date of the gifts. In this case, the
statutory requirements for the computation of the estate tax, in effect,
retroactively eliminate the benefit of the increased BEA that was available for
gifts made during the increased BEA period.
§ The
IRS responded by ruling to implement the TCJA changes to the BEA under section
2010(c)(3), the proposed regulations would amend §20.2010-1 to provide that, in
the case of decedents dying or gifts made after December 31, 2017, and before
January 1, 2026, the increased BEA is $10 million.
The proposed regulations also would amend
§20.2010-1 to provide a special rule in cases where the portion of the credit
as of the decedent’s date of death that is based on the BEA is less than the
sum of the credit amounts attributable to the BEA allowable in computing gift
tax payable within the meaning of section 2001(b)(2). In that case, the portion
of the credit against the net tentative estate tax that is attributable to the
BEA would be based upon the greater of those two credit amounts.
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