Time-Sensitive Estate Planning: Why You Must Lock in Your Estate Tax Exemptions Now

If you have significant wealth, the clock is ticking on a once-in-a-lifetime estate planning opportunity. By December 31, 2025, the federal estate tax exemption—currently at a historic high—will be cut nearly in half, exposing more of your estate to potential taxation. Wealthy families who don’t act now risk missing a critical chance to preserve their assets for future generations.

What’s Changing?

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 temporarily increased the federal estate and gift tax exemption to $13.61 million per individual ($27.22 million for married couples) in 2024, with an expected inflation adjustment pushing it even higher in 2025. However, unless Congress acts, this exemption will revert to around $7 million per person (adjusted for inflation) in 2026.

Why This Matters for High-Net-Worth Individuals

If your estate exceeds the post-2025 exemption, assets beyond that threshold will be subject to the 40% federal estate tax—a significant loss for your heirs.

For example:

  • A business owner with a $30 million estate who doesn’t plan ahead could see $9.2 million taxed at 40%, leading to an estimated $3.7 million tax liability.
  • A real estate investor with appreciating properties may see their portfolio’s value exceed the lower exemption in 2026, creating an unexpected tax burden.
  • A family with generational wealth may struggle to pass on assets without selling investments or liquidating property to cover the tax bill.

What You Should Do Now

Waiting until late 2025 may be too late. Estate planning strategies take time to implement, and acting now allows you to leverage today’s higher exemptions effectively.

1. Use Your Lifetime Gifting Exemption

The IRS has confirmed that gifts made under the current exemption limits will not be retroactively taxed when the exemption drops in 2026. This means you can transfer assets tax-free now while the exemption is high.

Example: A couple gifts $20 million to their children today, using up part of their exemption. Even when the exemption drops, those funds remain outside their taxable estate, saving millions in future taxes.

2. Establish a Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT)

SLATs allow one spouse to gift assets to an irrevocable trust benefiting the other spouse, ensuring access to the funds while still removing them from the taxable estate.

Example: A business owner places $10 million in a SLAT for their spouse, ensuring the assets remain protected and outside their estate.

3. Leverage Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRATs)

GRATs allow you to transfer appreciating assets to heirs with minimal gift tax implications. The grantor receives annuity payments, and any appreciation above a set interest rate (the IRS § 7520 rate) passes tax-free.

Example: A tech entrepreneur places pre-IPO shares in a GRAT, ensuring that if the stock value increases significantly, the appreciation is passed to heirs tax-free.

4. Convert Low-Basis Assets into Trusts

If you own assets with significant appreciation potential, transferring them into an irrevocable trust now can lock in today’s exemption while removing future growth from your taxable estate.

Example: A commercial real estate investor places properties into a dynasty trust, ensuring that appreciation remains outside the estate for multiple generations.

How to Talk to Your Advisor

When meeting with your financial or estate advisor, ask:

  • How much of my estate is at risk under the lower 2026 exemption?
  • Which assets should I transfer now to maximize tax benefits?
  • What types of trusts best suit my long-term wealth transfer goals?
  • Are there state-level estate taxes I should be considering?

The Bottom Line

This is not a wait-and-see situation. High-net-worth families should act now to maximize estate tax savings before the exemption is cut. By proactively working with your advisor and implementing strategies today, you can protect more of your wealth, ensure a smoother transition for heirs, and minimize estate tax exposure in 2026 and beyond.

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