Discover Your Estate Planning Secret Weapon: The Unlimited Marital Deduction

Unlock the power of the unlimited marital deduction to preserve wealth and protect your estate. Find out how this valuable provision can help secure your family's financial future.

The unlimited marital deduction is a provision in the U.S. Federal Estate and Gift Tax Law that allows an individual to transfer an unrestricted amount of assets to their spouse at any time, including at the death of the transferor, free from tax. The unlimited marital deduction is an estate preservation tool because assets can be distributed to surviving spouses without incurring estate or gift tax liabilities.

Key Takeaways

  • The unlimited marital deduction allows spouses to transfer an unlimited amount of money to one another, including upon death, without penalty or tax.
  • Gifts made to other non-spouse individuals or organizations are subject to IRS gifting limits and estate tax.
  • Any asset transferred to a surviving spouse can be included in the spouse’s taxable estate.
  • The limit on non-taxable gifts under the rules is $16,000 per individual and the estate tax exemption is $12.06 million for 2022.
  • The amounts increase to $17,000 and $12.92 million in 2023.

Understand the Power of the Unlimited Marital Deduction

The unlimited marital deduction is an estate tax provision that went into effect in 1982. The provision eliminated both the federal estate and gift tax on property transfers between spouses, treating them as one economic unit. The deduction was adopted by Congress to redress the problem of estates being pushed into higher tax brackets due to inflation.

With the unlimited marital deduction, the amount of property that can be transferred between spouses is unlimited, meaning a spouse can transfer all of their property to the other spouse during their lifetime or at death without incurring any federal estate or gift tax liabilities on this first transfer.

The transfer is made possible through an unlimited deduction from estate and gift tax that postpones the transfer’s taxes on the property inherited from each other until the second spouse’s death. The unlimited marital deduction allows married couples to delay the payment of estate taxes upon the first spouse’s death. After the surviving spouse dies, all assets in the estate over the applicable exclusion amount will be included in the survivor’s taxable estate.

Special Considerations

Any asset transferred to a surviving spouse can be included in the spouse’s taxable estate—unless it is spent or gifted during the surviving spouse’s lifetime. Alternatively, if the surviving spouse remarries, the unlimited marital deduction may allow the assets to pass to the new spouse without applying estate and/or gift taxes. In some situations, fewer taxes will be paid by using additional estate planning methods such as exemptions or trusts.

Unlock the Benefits of Qualified Domestic Trusts

The unlimited marital deduction applies only to surviving spouses that are United States citizens. A qualified domestic trust (QDOT) may be obtained to provide unlimited marital deductions for non-qualified spouses. A bequest through a QDOT defers estate tax until the principal is distributed by the trustee, a U.S. citizen, or a corporation that also withholds the estate tax.

Income on the principal distributed to the surviving spouse is taxed as individual income. After the surviving spouse becomes a U.S. citizen, the principal remaining in a QDOT may be distributed without further tax.

Related Terms: estate planning, wealth preservation, tax-free transfers, estate tax exemption

References

  1. Internal Revenue Service. “Estate Tax”.
  2. Internal Revenue Service. “IRS Provides Tax Inflation Adjustments for Tax Year 2022”.
  3. Internal Revenue Service. “IRS Provides Tax Inflation Adjustments for Tax Year 2023”.
  4. Internal Revenue Service. “Instructions for Form 709”.
  5. Internal Revenue Service. “Instructions for Form 706-QDT”.

Get ready to put your knowledge to the test with this intriguing quiz!

--- primaryColor: 'rgb(121, 82, 179)' secondaryColor: '#DDDDDD' textColor: black shuffle_questions: true --- Here are 10 quizzes generated based on the term "Unlimited Marital Deduction": ## What is the primary purpose of the Unlimited Marital Deduction? - [ ] To transfer business assets to a spouse without tax - [ ] To adjust annual income for taxation purposes - [x] To allow an unlimited amount of property to be given to a spouse without estate taxes - [ ] To deduct medical expenses paid on behalf of a spouse from taxable income ## Which of the following is NOT a condition for utilizing the Unlimited Marital Deduction? - [ ] The recipient spouse must be a U.S. citizen - [ ] The property has to be included in the decedent's gross estate - [ ] The couple must be legally married at the time of the decedent’s death - [x] The gift must be made before marriage ## The Unlimited Marital Deduction is primarily beneficial for which of the following? - [ ] Single individuals - [ ] Business entities - [x] Married couples - [ ] Non-resident aliens ## How does the Unlimited Marital Deduction impact the federal estate tax? - [ ] It increases the tax rate on the inherited estate - [ ] It needs to be repaid within 10 years - [x] It defers estate taxes until the death of the surviving spouse - [ ] It only applies to liquid assets ## A U.S. citizen gives $10 million in assets to their spouse, who is also a U.S. citizen. How much of it is subject to estate or gift tax due to the Unlimited Marital Deduction? - [ ] $5 million - [ ] $1 million - [ ] $10 million - [x] $0 ## Which of these limitations does not affect the Unlimited Marital Deduction? - [ ] The surviving spouse must pay taxes on transfer within 5 years - [ ] The deduction can only be applied if both spouses are U.S. citizens - [ ] The recipient must be legally recognized as a spouse - [x] The assets must be physical and tangible ## What happens if a non-citizen spouse inherits assets? - [ ] They qualify for the Unlimited Marital Deduction - [x] They do not qualify for the Unlimited Marital Deduction - [ ] Only assets exceeding $5 million qualify for deductions - [ ] They must pay estate taxes immediately ## Under the Unlimited Marital Deduction, when does the estate become taxable? - [ ] At the time of the first spouse's death - [ ] Upon the 5th anniversary of the first spouse’s death - [x] Upon the death of the surviving spouse - [ ] It is never taxable if re-invested ## Which IRS form is typically associated with reporting the transfer under the Unlimited Marital Deduction? - [x] Form 706 - [ ] Form 1040 - [ ] Form 1099 - [ ] Form W-2 ## Why is the Unlimited Marital Deduction considered advantageous for estate planning? - [ ] It allows conversion of assets to cash - [x] It allows the deferral of estate taxes - [ ] It increases the estate tax applicable to others - [ ] It mandates the sale of estate property These quizzes are designed to cover various aspects of the Unlimited Marital Deduction such as conditions for utilization, benefits, and implications for estate tax, among others.