By Leo J. Cushing, Jenna R. Wolinetz, Patricia Weisgerber and Karina Myers
The reality is that for large estates, estate planning has become income planning as the I. R. C. § 1014 Step-Up in basis provisions have not been changed.
Estate, Gift and Generation Skipping Tax Exemptions
- This provision increases the exemption to $15M per person and $30M per married couple, for deaths and gifts occurring on or after January 1, 2026.
- Portability remains unchanged for Federal Estate, Gift and Generation Skipping tax Exemptions.
- Massachusetts Estate Tax Exemptions remains $2M per person and $4M per married couple but does not have a gift tax and does not allow for portability.
- With the increased federal estate and gift tax exemption, estate planning has become income tax planning to obtain a step-up in basis under Code Section IRC Sec. 1014. (IRC § 1014 Step-Up in basis provisions were not changed).
SALT Cap - State and Local Income Tax
Deduction Limitation
- Beginning on January 1, 2025 this increases the Itemized Deduction to a maximum of $40,000 but reverts back to a maximum of $10,000 in 2030.
- This phases out for taxpayers with a modified gross income (MAGI) over $500,000 and ends entirely with a MAGI of $600,000.
- This SALT cap increase will require applicable taxpayers to reexamine itemized deductions versus the standard deduction since a taxpayer cannot utilize both.
- Notwithstanding the new SALT cap, for pass-through entities in Massachusetts, they are still able to deduct Massachusetts income tax on a businesses' taxable income on the federal income tax return. This is known as the Pass-Through Entity (PTE) tax.
Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction - I. R. C. § 199A - 20% Deduction
- This 20% deduction was designed to bring the business income tax on pass-through entities closer to the permanent 21% tax rate for C-corporations resulting in an effective maximum tax rate of 29.6%.
- Efforts to increase this deduction to 23% were unsuccessful.
Caution:
Do not run out and buy lots of equipment without analyzing the next
three sections with your tax attorney.
I. R. C. § 179 Expensing
- For expenditures on property placed in service after December 31, 2024, there is an annual deduction cap of $2.5M provided that the businesses expenditures do not exceed $4M. For every dollar expended over $4M the available $2.5M deduction is reduced dollar for dollar.
- The § 179 deduction for expenditures can generate a Federal Tax Loss which would also be deductible for Massachusetts Income Taxes.
100%
Bonus Depreciation
- Prior to the enactment of OBBBA, the bonus depreciation is equal to 60% of the cost of the qualifying assets.
- For property acquired on or after January 19, 2025, there is now bonus depreciation that is equal to 100% of the cost of qualifying assets.
- Businesses can continue to deduct the cost of qualifying assets in the year the property in placed in service and is unlimited by the dollar amount.
- This Bonus Depreciation is unaffected by the I. R. C. § 179 expense deduction. See I. R. C. § 168(k).
Special Depreciation Allowance - Qualified Production Property (QPP)
- This applies to Manufacturing Property and is an elective 100% depreciation allowance for QPP placed in service before January 1, 2031.
- This new provision incredibly allows 100% depreciation of the adjusted basis of non-residential real estate used in manufacturing (excluding the cost of land). It is unclear if the real estate must be owned by the company placing QPP in service.
- According to the statute, this applies to construction of QPP which commences after the enactment of this statute on July 4, 2025 through January 1, 2029 and places the QPP in service before January 1, 2031.
Miscellaneous
Itemized Deductions - For Individuals and Trustees
- The OBBBA permanently disallows miscellaneous itemized deductions for all but certain specified educator expenses.
- This change does not affect the deductibility certain expenses in connection with a Fiduciary Income Tax Return.
- See I. R. S. Regulations at 26 CFR § 1.67-4, costs related to all estate and generation skipping transfer tax returns, fiduciary income tax returns, and the decedents final income tax returns remain deductible. The costs are preparing all the other tax returns (for example, gift tax returns are costs commonly and customarily incurred by individuals and thus are subject to the 2% floor, i.e. an itemized miscellaneous deduction).
- Bundled Trustees' fees cannot be deducted and they must be broken down between investment advisory fees (not deductible) and general trustees fees which are deductible.
A founding partner of Cushing & Dolan, P.C. and founding Co-chair of REBA’s Estate Planning, Trusts and Estate Administration, Leo Cushing is one of the pre-eminent tax lawyers in the Commonwealth and a frequent speaker and panelist at the Associations webinars and conference programs. Leo can be contacted at lcushing@cushingdolan.com.
A lawyer in Cushing & Dolan’s
Litigation Department, Jenna’s responsibility and passion is ensuring that
clients' interests are vigorously defended when matters become the subject of a
lawsuit. She also works with owners of businesses to resolve partnership
disputes and negotiate buy-sell agreements. Jenna’s email address is jwolinetz@cushingdolan.com.
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A Cushing & Dolan lawyer, Patricia Weisgerber’s broad practice area includes estate planning, elder law, probate law, family law, real estate law, business law and tax controversies. She can be emailed at pweiswgerber@cushingdolan.com.
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A graduate of the Boston Latin School, Karina Myers is a Cushing & Dolan intern and an undergraduate at the College of the Holy Cross.