End-of-life tax planning helps you minimize taxes for your heirs and ensure your assets pass efficiently. Understanding estate taxes, inherited account rules, and beneficiary planning is crucial.
Why End-of-Life Tax Planning Matters
The Impact on Heirs
Taxes Can Reduce Inheritance:
- Estate taxes (if large estate)
- Income taxes on inherited accounts
- Why: Significant impact
Example:
- $1 million traditional IRA
- Heir pays tax: $220,000 (22% bracket)
- Net inheritance: $780,000
Vs. Roth IRA:
- $1 million Roth IRA
- Net inheritance: $1,000,000 (tax-free)
The Opportunity
Planning Can Minimize Taxes:
- For your estate
- For your heirs
- Why: Maximize inheritance
Estate Tax Planning
Federal Estate Tax
2026 Exemption: $14,320,000 per person
Most Estates Don't Pay:
- Under exemption: No estate tax
- Why: High exemption
Example: $2 million estate
- No estate tax: Under exemption
Portability
Estate Tax Portability:
- Surviving spouse can use deceased spouse's unused exemption
- Why: Doubles exemption for couple
Example:
- Spouse 1 exemption: $14,320,000
- Spouse 2 exemption: $14,320,000
- Combined: $28,640,000
Must File: Form 706 to elect portability
State Estate Taxes
Some States Have Estate Tax:
- Lower exemptions than federal
- May apply to smaller estates
- Why: State revenue
Check Your State: Rules vary
Inherited Account Planning
Traditional IRA/401(k)
Heirs Pay Tax:
- Inherited traditional accounts are taxable
- At their tax bracket
- Why: Pre-tax money
10-Year Rule (most non-spouse beneficiaries):
- Must withdraw within 10 years
- Why: Faster tax collection
Example: Inherit $500,000 traditional IRA
- Heir pays tax: $110,000+ (22% bracket)
- Net: $390,000
Roth IRA/401(k)
Heirs Get Tax-Free:
- Inherited Roth accounts are tax-free
- If account was 5+ years old
- Why: After-tax contributions
10-Year Rule (most non-spouse beneficiaries):
- Must withdraw within 10 years
- But withdrawals are tax-free
- Why: Tax-free inheritance
Example: Inherit $500,000 Roth IRA
- Heir gets: $500,000 (tax-free)
- Vs. traditional: $390,000 (after tax)
Beneficiary Planning
Spouse Beneficiaries
Best Treatment:
- Can treat inherited IRA as own
- More flexibility
- Why: Best option
Example: Spouse inherits $500,000 traditional IRA
- Can treat as own: Delay RMDs until age 73
- Vs. 10-year rule: Must withdraw within 10 years
Non-Spouse Beneficiaries
10-Year Rule:
- Must withdraw within 10 years
- Less flexibility
- Why: Stricter rules
Example: Child inherits $500,000 traditional IRA
- Must withdraw within 10 years: Average $50,000/year
- Tax: $11,000/year (at 22% bracket)
Multiple Beneficiaries
Can Split Accounts:
- Each beneficiary gets own account
- Why: Flexibility
Example:
- $1 million IRA, 2 children
- Split: $500,000 each
- Each has own 10-year period
Try the tool
Roth vs. Traditional for Heirs
Traditional IRA for Heirs
Heirs Pay Tax:
- Fully taxable
- At their bracket
- Why: Pre-tax money
Example: $500,000 traditional IRA
- Heir pays: $110,000 tax (22% bracket)
- Net: $390,000
Roth IRA for Heirs
Heirs Get Tax-Free:
- Tax-free inheritance
- If account 5+ years old
- Why: After-tax contributions
Example: $500,000 Roth IRA
- Heir gets: $500,000 (tax-free)
- Vs. traditional: $390,000 (after tax)
- Difference: $110,000
The Strategy
Convert to Roth:
- Before death
- Pay tax now
- Heirs get tax-free
- Why: Better for heirs
Example:
- Convert $500,000 to Roth: $110,000 tax (22% bracket)
- Heirs get: $500,000 tax-free
- Vs. traditional: Heirs pay $110,000 tax
- Net benefit: $0 tax (but heirs get more)
Actually: You pay tax, but heirs get more (net benefit if you're in lower bracket than heirs)
Gifting Strategies
Annual Gift Exclusion
2026 Exclusion: $19,000 per recipient
Can Give Tax-Free:
- Up to $19,000 per person per year
- No gift tax
- Why: Reduce estate
Example:
- Give $19,000 to each of 3 children
- Total: $57,000 tax-free per year
Lifetime Exemption
2026 Exemption: $14,320,000 per person
Can Give More:
- Above annual exclusion
- Uses lifetime exemption
- Why: Reduce estate
Example:
- Give $100,000 to child
- Annual exclusion: $19,000
- Uses exemption: $81,000
- Still under lifetime exemption: No tax
Trust Planning
Revocable Living Trust
Avoids Probate:
- Assets pass outside probate
- But still in estate for tax purposes
- Why: Privacy, efficiency
Irrevocable Trust
Removes from Estate:
- Assets not in estate
- But lose control
- Why: Estate tax planning
Complex: Requires professional help
Final Considerations
Update Beneficiaries
Review Regularly:
- Ensure correct
- Update after life changes
- Why: Ensure wishes
Document Your Wishes
Clear Instructions:
- Beneficiary designations
- Will/trust
- Why: Avoid confusion
Communicate with Heirs
Let Them Know:
- What they'll inherit
- Tax implications
- Why: Prepare them
Bottom Line
End-of-life tax planning:
- Estate tax: Usually not an issue (high exemption)
- Inherited accounts: Traditional taxable, Roth tax-free
- Beneficiary planning: Spouse has more flexibility
- Roth conversions: Can benefit heirs
- Gifting: Can reduce estate
- Update beneficiaries: Ensure correct
Key Takeaways:
- Estate tax usually not issue: High exemption ($14,320,000)
- Inherited accounts: Traditional taxable, Roth tax-free for heirs
- Beneficiary planning: Spouse best treatment, non-spouse 10-year rule
- Roth conversions: Can benefit heirs (tax-free inheritance)
- Gifting strategies: Annual exclusion, lifetime exemption
- Update beneficiaries: Ensure correct designations
- Plan ahead: Minimize taxes for heirs
Action Steps:
- Understand estate tax (usually not an issue, but check)
- Plan inherited accounts (Roth better for heirs)
- Consider Roth conversions (tax-free for heirs)
- Review and update beneficiaries
- Consider gifting strategies (reduce estate)
- Document your wishes (will, trust, beneficiaries)
- Communicate with heirs (prepare them)
- Work with professional for complex planning
Remember: End-of-life tax planning helps you minimize taxes for your heirs and ensure your assets pass efficiently. Consider Roth conversions (tax-free for heirs), update beneficiaries, and plan for inherited accounts. The key is understanding how your choices affect your heirs and planning accordingly.