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Private Annuity
Legal Tax Angles:
How to Save Taxes Without Going to Jail
No doubt you have heard about the kind of annuities that
stop paying when the annuitant dies. They are called “Life Income Annuities”
and they provide the annuitant with a maximum annual income that won’t run out
no matter how long the annuitant lives. Most large company pension plans use
this kind of annuity to make payments to the retiree. The typical life income
annuity is issued by an insurance company - but it doesn’t have to be. An
annuity can be issued by anyone - even an individual. The “catch” is that the
tax benefits require that the annuity be an unsecured contract. For that
reason, hardly anyone ever enters into an annuity contract with anyone other
than an insurance company or a large charity.
But some people enter into annuity contracts with their
heirs in order to transfer assets to their heirs at a minimal estate tax cost.
The transfer of assets to your heirs with a private annuity removes those
assets from your estate because the payments to you cease at the time of your
death. The assets you sold belong to your heirs - and they have been
transferred to your heirs free of any federal estate tax.
A private annuity is a much discussed but little used
device to eliminate estate taxes and to transfer appreciated property to your
heirs with deferred capital gains taxes. It works best when it’s combined with
a gifting program and/or with a
charitable remainder trust . It works even better if
you have family members who are not U.S. residents or citizens. And it’s most
effective when the buyer of your property is in a very low or zero tax bracket.
You can sell appreciated assets to a private individual
or entity (as contrasted to an insurance company) in exchange for what is
called a "private annuity". This is like a life income annuity from an
insurance company. When you die, the payments cease. But don't panic. If you
make the annuity agreement with an heir (like a son or daughter), you will have
avoided part of the capital gains tax and the federal estate tax as well.
This tactic is most appropriate (financially) when there
is a great likelihood of a pre-mature death at an early age ... and where there
is a near certainty of a large estate tax. For example, father has a terminal
illness and isn't likely to live more than a few years, but is expected to live
more than one year. He has substantial assets that are likely to be subject to
the top estate tax rate of 50%. An alternative is to sell some of the property
to his children (assuming they are of legal age) in exchange for a private
annuity. If he is 55 years old, the annual annuity payment would be about 12%
of the value of the property each year. If father dies within two years, he
will have transferred 76% of his estate to his children free of any estate
taxes. The private annuity can zero out an estate in as little time as it takes
to draw up the contract. (And there are ways to deal with the assets coming
back into the estate.)
The heirs who are buying the property have a cost basis
equal to the present value of the future annuity payments. When father (the
annuitant) dies, the cost basis is recomputed based on the total payments
actually made to the annuitant. At that point, the heirs can pursue a variety
of ways to minimize the capital gains tax - like a charitable trust.
From an asset protection perspective, the property no
longer belongs to dad. It now belongs to the kids. However, the annuity
payments the children are paying to dad will be subject to the claims of any
creditors.
I have been asked to counsel with people who have been
approached with the idea of selling the stock in their business (or other
highly appreciated assets) to a foreign person or company in exchange for a
private annuity. As long as the U.S. person does not control the foreign person
or entity, the tax benefits can be realized. BUT -- remember that the private
annuity MUST be an unsecured contract. Do you really want to sell your
most valuable asset to a foreign person you don't know in exchange for a
promise to pay you an income for the rest of your life? And, when you die, the
assets now belong to the foreign person.
Also, be sure that the person or company that is issuing
the annuity contract is not in the business of issuing annuity or insurance
contracts. The reason is because the private annuity tax benefits are not
available when the annuity payor is in the business of issuing annuity or
insurance contracts.
Vern Jacobs
June 25, 2003
Vern Jacobs
Copyright, 2003
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