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February 21, 2018

By: Suzanne Brown Walsh

Until the passage of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the federal applicable exclusion amount for the estate of a person dying in 2018 was scheduled to be $5.6M. The federal applicable exclusion amount sets (i) the applicable exclusion amount available at death, (ii) each person’s lifetime gift applicable exclusion amount, and (iii) each person’s generation-skipping transfer ("GST") tax
applicable exclusion amount. So, before the new tax act, a married couple with proper planning would "only" have been able to transfer a combined total of $11.2M free of federal estate, gift and GST tax to their beneficiaries in 2018 either by gift or at death. Then, in stepped Congress and the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which doubled the federal applicable exclusion amount to $11.2M from 2018 to 20261.

By now, this is news to few people. What may be surprising is how it affects the increased estate tax exemption that the Connecticut Legislature approved as part of the 2017 Budget Act. As described in our October 27, 2017 client alert, beginning in 2018, the Connecticut estate and gift tax exemption increases over a three-year period from $2M to the federal estate tax exclusion, and the marginal rate schedule for estate and gifts was changed, as shown in the following table:

Value of Taxable Estates or Gifts between 2018 and 2020
  Value of Taxable Estate or Gift Marginal Rates
  Governor’s Bill  
2018 2019 2020
Up to $2,000,000 None    
$2,000,001 to $2,600,000 None  
$2,600,001 to $3,600,000 7.2%   None
$3,600,001 to $4,100,000 7.8% 7.8%  
$4,100,001 to $5,100,000 8.4% 8.4%  
$5,100,001 to federal threshold
10.0%

10.0%
 
Federal threshold to $6,100,000 10.0%
$6,100,001 to $7,100,000 10.4% 10.4% 10.4%
$7,100,001 to $8,100,000 10.8% 10.8% 10.8%
$8,100,001 to $9,100,000 11.2% 11.2% 11.2%
$9,100,001 to $10,100,000 11.6% 11.6% 11.6%
Over $10,100,000 12.0% 12.0% 12.0%

The cap on the maximum Connecticut estate tax imposed on the estates of persons dying on or after January 1, 2019, and the gift tax imposed on taxable gifts made after January 1, 2019, was reduced from $20M to $15M.

Connecticut also made conforming changes in requirements for filing tax returns with the Probate Court and releasing estate tax liens.

So, in 2018, we have a $2.6M Connecticut estate and gift tax exemption, and in 2019, it rises again to $3.6M which is welcome news to many residents.

What happens to the Connecticut exemption in 2020, though, became unclear after the federal tax changes were enacted. As one can see, the new estate and gift tax table refers to the federal exclusion, which the 2017 Budget Act defined by reference to the inflation-adjusted amount annually calculated by the IRS. As a result, the Connecticut law now would exempt from tax amounts up to $11.2M in 2020, instead of one-half that amount as the legislature seems to have intended.

Handily, Governor Malloy’s new bill responding to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act addresses this issue by proposing the following new phase-out table:

Value of Taxable Estates or Gifts between 2018 and 2023
  Value of Taxable Estate or Gift Marginal Rates
    Governor’s Bill    
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Up to $2,600,000 None None        
$2,600,001 to $3,600,000 7.2% None      
$3,600,001 to $4,100,000 7.8% 7.8%   None    
$4,100,001 to $5,100,000 8.4% 8.4%     None  
$5,100,001 to $6,100,000 10.0% 10.0% 10.0%     None
$6,100,001 to $7,100,000 10.4% 10.4% 10.4%      
$7,100,001 to $8,100,000 10.8% 10.8% 10.8% 10.8%    
$8,100,001 to $9,100,000 11.2% 11.2% 11.2% 11.2%    
$9,100,001 to $10,100,000 11.6% 11.6% 11.6% 11.6% 11.6%  
Over $10,100,000 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0%  
Federal Basic Exclusion 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0%  
Over Federal Basic Exclusion 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0% 12.0%

Thus, the proposal extends the phase-in period for the larger federal exclusion, clarifying that the Connecticut exemption will not equal the new, larger federal exclusion until 2023. This in turn means that the Connecticut exemption is slated to return to $5.0M in 2026, in accordance with the federal law.

Please contact your Murtha Cullina estate planning attorney to discuss the impact of these developments on your estate plan in more detail.

1 The IRS has not officially calculated and announced the new federal applicable exclusion for 2018 because of a change in how the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is computed. Eventually, it is expected to be confirmed at $11.2M.

PDF File te_lets_all_wait_until_after_2023_to_die_in_connecticut.pdf

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