Personal Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

A Tale of Oranges and Estate Planning

Consider an orange. Each part of the orange is worth more – or less – to different people. To some the juice is all that’s important. Others find the greatest value in the seeds. Yet others swear up and down that the skin of the orange is most valuable. As long as each gets what [...]

Grandma’s Feather Bed

Remember the good old days of Grandma’s feather bed? Remember when you had a pillow fight with your brothers and sisters? Your parents were yelling at you to cut it out before someone got hurt.

And then one of the pillows broke open…

Wow! You’d never seen so many feathers. They were floating [...]

Grandma’s Legacy

When the grandchildren are small and birthdays or holidays roll around, Grandma (and it usually is Grandma) makes sure the little ones get something – usually clothes or a toy. And tucked in with the gift itself there’s almost a card and a note expressing love.

As the grandkids get older and family gets spread out [...]

60-Second Course on Charitable Gifts

Here’s a 60-second course in charitable giving. If you understand this, you’ll have a framework to help understand complex charitable gifts. Start your stopwatch.

Picture in your mind Bessie, the milk cow. (You can read about her on the famous cows website.)

That’s it. That’s all you need to know. If you can picture Bessie, you understand [...]

Roth IRAs Offer 3 Estate Planning Benefits

Because it looks like income tax rates will go up in future years (how else will Congress pay for all the bailouts they’re making?), Roth IRAs promise to become even more popular. Although we usually focus attention on the income tax benefits of a Roth IRA, there are also estate planning (and not just estate [...]

Senate Estate Tax Bill Would Exempt $3.5 Million

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) introduced legislation (S. 722) the end of March to make “permanent” many of the tax cuts passed in 2001. While the bill also includes changes affecting income taxes, this article focuses on the estate and gift tax terms. (Anyone who has studied changes in tax law understands that “permanent” means anything but permanent.)

If you die in 2009, the estate tax exemption is $3.5 million and the top rate after that is 45%. In other words, if your estate is under $3.5 million, you pay no estate tax. If it’s more $3.5 million, the tax on everything over $3.5 million is 45%.

Under current law, the estate tax disappears in 2010 and then reappears in 2011 with a $600,000 exemption and a 55% top rate.

Estate Planning and the Five Rights

Estate planning isn’t anything mysterious. Most importantly, it’s not just about tax planning. And it really isn’t all that complicated either, not once you understand some basic principles. Estate planning is really nothing more than what I call the ‘Five Rights’ – doing what is needed to make sure the right things get to the [...]