Safe Retirement Income

Your Retirement Depends on It

Tim Barton, Chartered Financial Consultant

Pepin Wisconsin
715-220-4866

August 25, 2015 by Tim Barton Leave a Comment

Paying the Estate Tax Bill

The federal government will not accept a percentage of your estate as payment for your estate tax bill. Instead, your estate tax bill must be paid in cash, and it must be paid within nine months after your death.

If your estate is subject to the federal estate tax, there are FOUR ways to provide your estate with the cash needed to pay your estate tax bill:

1. 100% METHOD

You could accumulate enough cash in your estate to pay your estate tax bill outright. Rarely, however, does a successful person accumulate such large sums of cash. Instead, the reason for financial success is usually due to the investment of cash in appreciating assets, rather than accumulating it in a bank.

2. 100% PLUS METHOD

Your estate could borrow the cash needed to pay your estate tax bill. This, however, only defers the problem, since the money will then have to be repaid with interest.

3. ASSET LIQUIDATION METHOD

Your estate could liquidate sufficient assets to pay your estate tax bill. This choice may make sense if your estate owns considerable assets that can be readily sold for a gain following your death. Keep in mind, however, that if a forced liquidation is necessary, it may bring only a small fraction of the true value of your assets. In addition, sales expenses are bound to be incurred.

4. DISCOUNT METHOD

Assuming you qualify, you can arrange now to pay your estate tax bill with life insurance dollars. For every dollar your estate needs, you can give an insurance company from approximately one to seven cents a year, depending on your age and health. No matter how long you live, it is unlikely you will ever give the insurance company more than 100 cents on the dollar. In addition, the life insurance policy can frequently be structured to accommodate your unique premium payment requirements.

 

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Filed Under: Lifestyle, Money Saving, News, Personal Finance, Retirement Planning Tagged With: business, finance, Money, taxes

About Tim Barton

Growing up during the 60s and 70s Tim saw the real-life effects of sure thing stock investments gone sour. It seemed all the adults around him who did not keep their money in safe investments like insurance, banks and government bonds lost most of it. While they were young, they felt invincible, but as age crept up, their conversations turned to the gloomy reality of lost retirement funds.
In 1976 all those memories started Tim along his career path dedicated to helping people avoid the pain of losing their hard earned dollars. Tim decided to enter the retirement planning business vowing never to cause anyone to lose money. He has kept that promise by focusing on insurance based planning.

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