Many believe that once they set up and fund a revocable living trust, property held in the trust will avoid federal estate taxes after dying. In reality, a living trust provides no unique estate tax avoidance strategies.
The primary mechanisms for reducing estate taxes—the unlimited marital deduction and the charitable deduction—apply whether money or property (sometimes referred to generally as assets) are held in a trust or held directly by an individual. The unlimited marital deduction allows the transfer of assets to a US citizen’s surviving spouse free from the estate tax. In contrast, the charitable deduction permits tax-free transfers to qualifying charitable organizations. These deductions are not exclusive to living trusts but can be incorporated into a trust-based estate plan to ensure that assets are distributed tax-efficiently.
Before delving into estate tax planning, it is essential to understand that estate taxes come into play only when someone gifts assets during their lifetime and death that combine to exceed a specific threshold value. This threshold is the federal lifetime exclusion amount and is currently $13.99 million for 2025. Unless the trustmaker and the trustmaker’s revocable living trust have combined assets exceeding this amount, no federal estate tax will likely be due at a trustmaker’s death. However, for purposes of this article, we will assume that the trustmaker’s assets owned individually and in the revocable trust are valued at more than the lifetime exclusion amount.
Caution: If you live in a state with a state estate tax, you need to work with an experienced estate planning attorney to address these concerns appropriately, as state estate tax thresholds are often lower than the federal threshold and may require additional planning.
Of the two planning strategies mentioned above—the unlimited marital deduction and the charitable deduction—only the charitable deduction tool is available to single individuals. With this tool, all assets in a person’s trust left to qualifying charitable organizations will be removed from the trustmaker’s taxable estate. On the other hand, the assets left to noncharitable beneficiaries will likely be exposed to federal estate tax liability if the remaining assets exceed the current federal exemption amount. In other words, if your beneficiaries are your children, your brothers, and sisters, your nieces and nephews, your best friend, another trust, or even a for-profit business, then the property they inherit through the trust could be subject to federal estate tax depending on the size of your remaining estate. Otherwise, any property distributed to qualifying charitable organizations through the trust passes free from federal estate tax.
Married couples have both the charitable and unlimited marital deductions available to them. The charitable deduction functions as described above for the single individual. With the unlimited marital deduction, all qualifying transfers of assets held in your trust that pass to your US-citizen spouse after your death will likely not be subject to estate taxes due to the unlimited marital deduction. However, to be deemed a qualifying transfer, the assets must either pass to the spouse outright or be held and administered in a special trust for your spouse’s benefit.
On the other hand, if you are married. You create and fund a revocable living trust and name your spouse and children as current beneficiaries after you die. The portion of the trust passing to your spouse (utilizing the unlimited marital deduction) will likely not be subject to federal estate tax. The portion passing to your children may be subject to estate tax (depending on the value of the assets and the federal lifetime exclusion amount available to you when you pass). If you include one or more qualifying charitable organizations as beneficiaries, the portion passing to the charities will likely not be subject to estate tax.
If a revocable living trust does nothing to reduce your federal estate tax bill, which cannot be done by holding the assets in your name, why should you consider setting one up? There are at least three good reasons:
For many people, a revocable living trust is the ideal way to organize their final affairs. While the estate tax avoidance tools used by a living trust are not exclusive to such trusts, they can be incorporated into a trust-based estate plan to capture the general benefits that living trusts offer and provide equally important additional benefits unrelated to tax savings.
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