Call Our Offices
Your Money.
Your Life.
Your Way.
article
GRATs: A Planning Tool for Business Succession
Shared by Strong Valley on September 27, 2022
GRATs: A Planning Tool for Business Succession
Image of a stop watch for the in-brief section heading
IN BRIEF
Here's a quick look at what's in this article:

Have you heard about the ways to reduce your family’s tax burden while keeping your business intact? With this planning tool you can put all or part of your company’s stock into an irrevocable trust that pays you, the business owner, a fixed income for a specified number of years, being especially useful if a business or estate assets will appreciate in value.

Important Disclosure: Content on our website and in our newsletters is for informational purposes only. The information provided may (or may not) directly apply to your situation. We recommend that readers work directly with a professional advisor when making decisions in the context of their specific situation.

For today’s business owner, continuation and estate planning go hand-in-hand. Without proper tax strategies, the time, hard work, and money you’ve invested in your business could yield little more than a significant tax bill for your heirs. Fortunately, with careful planning, there are numerous ways of reducing your family’s tax burden while keeping your business intact.

Gifting Review

You are annually allowed to give assets valued up to $15,000 in 2020 to each of your children or grandchildren (or anyone else, for that matter) without incurring a tax penalty. A married couplecan transfer assets worth $30,000 in 2020 – $15,000 per adult.

Making gifts qualifying for this annual gift tax exclusion can help lower your estate’s taxable value and minimize estate taxes. In 2020, the federal estate tax generally applies when a person's assets exceed $11.58 million at the time of death and can be as high as 40%. Further, some states also assess estate tax.

Accordingly, above and beyond the annual gift tax exclusion, every individual has a lifetime gift tax exemption of $11.58 million in 2020, almost $180,000 more than it was in 2019. Most taxpayers will not reach the gift tax limit of $11.58 million over their lifetimes, but for some business owners, this amount is not enough to transfer an entire business. Furthermore, using the lifetime gift tax exemption will reduce what you can transfer tax free at death. So in order to substantially reduce your tax liabilities, further planning options should be explored.

Is a GRAT for You?

For many estates, a trust is a cost-effective method of making gifts, which can often facilitate intergenerational transfers. In particular, the grantor retained annuity trust (GRAT) enables you to gift a substantial amount while retaining an income interest for a specified period of time. This significantly minimizes your gift tax liability or entirely eliminates your exposure. GRATs are especially useful if a business or estate assets will appreciate in value.

With a GRAT, you can put all or part of your company’s stock into an irrevocable trust that pays you, the business owner, a fixed income for a specified number of years.

Since the trust is irrevocable, once you place stock or other assets into the trust, they are there for good, or until the GRAT terminates and the assets pass to your designated beneficiaries.

Assets transferred to the trust are considered a gift for gift tax purposes. GRAT gifts do not qualify for the annual exclusion because the beneficiaries have a future interest, not a present interest, in the gift. Since you retain an income interest, the gift’s value is discounted, reducing your total gift tax liability. However any income is taxed to you as the grantor.

An applicable Federal interest rate determines your annuity (the income you receive as a percentage of assets transferred) value. GRATs are generally most attractive when interest rates are low because you may receive substantial transfer tax savings if the growth rate of assets transferred to the trust exceeds the federal interest rate. Your beneficiaries will receive any appreciation free of estate and gift tax, provided you survive the trust term. It is important to keep in mind that while reducing your transfer tax liability and possibly building wealth for your heirs, a GRAT also locks in a guaranteed income stream for yourself for a fixed time period.

A Word of Caution

It is important to emphasize one major drawback to using a GRAT: If the grantor dies before the trust term expires, then the trust’s full value falls back into the grantor’s estate. It is important to plan for a trust term you expect to outlive. Given this risk, older grantors may wish to specify shorter terms, or set up several trusts of varying durations, known as “laddering.”

Business owner estate planning is a multifaceted endeavor. Advance planning and carefully considered tax-efficient strategies may help maximize the transfer of wealth to your heirs.

Be sure to consult your financial advisor about your unique circumstances. 

Investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. No investment strategy can guarantee a profit or protect against loss in periods of declining values. Past performance does not guarantee future results or even estimates of actual returns a client may achieve. This information is designed to provide general information on the subjects covered. Consult your financial professional before making any investment decision. Opinions and estimates offered are subject to change without notice. We believe the information provided here is reliable, but do not warrant its accuracy or completeness. Please see other important disclosures related to StrongValley.com

Your turn – What would you like to know about GRATs: A Planning Tool for Business Succession?

Strong Valley wants to provide useful and meaningful information to our clients, to our professional network, and to the broader community of people we serve. We’d love to hear your questions about GRATs: A Planning Tool for Business Succession or about any other topics you care about. You can call our office directly, or use the contact form below to send us your questions and/or suggestions.  And if you found the information helpful or entertaining, we hope you'll share the Strong Valley story with others.

We love to hear your questions, ideas, and feedback!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Copyright © 2024 Strong Valley Wealth & Pension, LLC
Investment advice offered through Integrated Partners, doing business as Strong Valley Wealth & Pension, a registered investment advisor. The information on this website has not been approved or verified by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission or by any state securities authority. Registration as an Investment Adviser does not imply a certain level of skill or training. Strong Valley Wealth & Pension, LLC offers some securities through M.S. Howells & Co. Member FINRA/SIPC. M.S. Howells & Co. is not affiliated with Strong Valley Wealth & Pension.
The link you have selected is located on another server. The linked site contains information that has been created, published, maintained, or otherwise posted by institutions or organizations independent of this organization. We do not endorse, approve, certify, or control any linked websites, their sponsors, or any of their policies, activities, products, or services. We do not assume responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the information contained therein. Visitors to any linked websites should not use or rely on the information contained therein until they have consulted with an independent financial professional. Please click “Continue to Link” to leave this website and proceed to the selected site.