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10 Current Strategies to Maneuver Around Capital Gains Tax

Top Tri-State Area Lawyer says Estate Plans may Need Adjustments in Light of Significant Tax Law Changes

NEW YORK, NY / ACCESSWIRE / September 11, 2015 / The rise in capital gains tax rates and the higher federal estate tax exemption have shifted the estate planning paradigm. McManus & Associates, an award-winning estate planning law firm with offices in New York and New Jersey, today shared "10 Current Strategies to Maneuver around Capital Gains Tax." In this edition of the firm's Educational Focus Series, McManus & Associates Founding Principal and top AV-rated Attorney John O. McManus outlines tactics to avoid and minimize capital gains tax. Go to the firm's website to hear the advice that John recently shared with clients: http://bit.ly/1NrIyiB.

"Across the nation, long-term capital gains tax rates now range from 25% to 33%, with the combination of the top federal, state and local rates, along with the Medicare surtax," noted McManus. "This demands a fresh look at current planning strategies."

10 Current Strategies to Maneuver around Capital Gains Tax

1. The Basics of Basis. Cost basis is the original acquisition value of an asset for tax purposes (usually the purchase price or the inherited price), adjusted for stock splits, dividends and return of capital distributions. This original value is used to determine the capital gain - and becomes the difference between the asset's cost basis and the current market value.

a. Assets with a high basis include cash (which actually has no basis) and recently purchased assets that have not yet appreciated.
b. Assets with a low basis include Exxon stock your grandfather gave to you and a Brooklyn brownstone purchased in the '60's that have significantly appreciated.

2. Striking while the Step-Up's Hot. A step-up in basis is the readjustment of the value of an appreciated asset for tax purposes. With a step-up in basis, the value of the asset is determined to be the higher market value of the asset at the time of transfer, not the value at which the original party purchased the asset.

a. When an asset is gifted to an individual or to a trust, there is a carryover of the original basis - meaning there is no step-up in basis. Although the asset is now outside the grantor's estate for estate tax purposes, upon the sale of the asset, there will be capital gains tax to be paid.
b. When an asset is included in a decedent's estate, the asset receives a step-up in basis to the date of death value at that time. The asset can be sold to avoid any capital gains tax.

3. Transfer Up to Get Capital Gains Down. Transferring an asset "upstream" to your parents or a trust for the benefit of your parents will enable the asset to get a step-up in basis upon the parents' death.