Read this if you are a business owner or involved in estate planning.
I have some good news, and I have some bad news. Here’s the bad news. Inflation impacts our lives in countless ways—spending, interest rates, savings, business decisions—driven by economic cycles beyond our control. Price increases are observable across the entire spectrum of goods and services. Businesses able to pass on increases in sustainability may continue benefiting from these general increases, but only to a point. These increases are characteristic of late expansion and slowdown phases of economic cycles and typically top out in a contractionary phase. Economic policy, by way of restrictive monetary policies, aims to reign in the acceleration rate of inflation. This impact is typically subject to a time lag in observation. Economic decline, holding all else equal, typically results in lower overall profitability and depressed business value. Increased uncertainty, holding all else equal, typically results in higher costs of capital, which in turn results in depressed business value. Bad news indeed.
Now for the good news. A potential silver lining exists. You may have the ability to transfer a larger portion of ownership of privately held business interests at lower levels of value—while annual exclusions are increasing because of inflation. Here’s how.
Federal gift tax annual exclusion increasing
For the tax year ending December 31, 2022, the federal gift tax annual exclusion is $16,000 per individual ($32,000 per married couple choosing to split gifts) for 2022. IRC § 2503 (b)(2) allows for inflationary adjustments to annual gift tax exclusion, but only in $1,000 increments. Based on inflationary adjustments, the federal gift tax annual exclusion for 2023 is $17,000 per individual ($34,000 per married couple choosing to split gifts). The gift tax annual exclusion allows a taxpayer to gift a certain amount to a recipient each year without using any of the taxpayer’s lifetime exemption amount.
For gifts over and above an annual exclusion amount, each taxpayer receives a lifetime transfer tax exemption, which is unified for both federal gift and estate taxes. At current 2022 levels, the lifetime exemption amount is $12.06 million for each taxpayer, or $24.12 million for married couples. Inflationary adjustments impact this amount as well. For 2023 the lifetime exemption is $12.92 million for each taxpayer, or $25.84 million for married couples. That is an increase of almost $900,000 per taxpayer in one year.
Gifting strategies
Knowing the current and future annual exclusion and lifetime exemption amounts, privately held business owners may make use of efficient gifting strategies in straddling the calendar year reference date of valuation. In this example, the subject company and subject interest would be valued on distinct sides of the calendar year with one primary analysis using very similar financial data (a balance sheet as of December 31, 2022, may closely resemble a balance sheet on January 1, 2023). The primary analysis may allow the privately held business owners to accomplish 2022 and 2023 planning in one fell swoop.
If transfers through gifting are already part of your overall long-term wealth and estate plan, accelerating parts of these plans may make sense—particularly as lifetime exemptions are at historically high levels.
2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Acts provides for reversion of the lifetime exemption amount back to $5 million (adjusted for post-2011 inflation) for each taxpayer and $10 million (adjusted for post-2011 inflation) for married couples after the year 2025.
If considering gifting strategies as part of your overall wealth and estate plan, consult your professional legal and accounting teams to fully understand whether additional gifts can or should be made in 2022 and in 2023 for tax planning purposes.