Tag: Taxes

  • Every Parent Should Know the Consequences of Living Without an Estate Plan

    Every Parent Should Know the Consequences of Living Without an Estate Plan

    Written by: Sean Hummel, CFP®

    Did you know that 55% of Americans have ZERO estate plan! Maybe that’s not so shocking. What if I told you only 36% of parents with young children have a Will! This means if you’re one of the 64% without a plan, when tragedy strikes, the courts would decide who cares for your children!  The #1 reason for not having a plan…

    “I haven’t gotten around to it.” 

    As a financial advisor specializing in high-net-worth individuals and families, I’ve seen firsthand how estate planning can preserve wealth, protect loved ones, and ensure your legacy aligns with your values. Many clients assume that if their net worth falls below the federal estate tax exemption ($15 million per individual starting in 2026) they don’t need a formal plan. After all, no federal taxes means no problems, right? Unfortunately, that’s a dangerous misconception. Dying without an estate plan can lead to unnecessary stress, financial losses, and family conflicts, even for estates that are well under that $15 million threshold. In this post, I’ll outline the key risks and why proactive planning is essential, regardless of your net worth.

    Understanding the Federal Estate Tax Exemption

    First, a quick clarification: Starting January 1st, 2026 The federal estate tax applies only to estates exceeding $15 million ($30 million for married couples). For families below this limit, there’s no federal estate tax liability. However, this doesn’t eliminate other challenges. State-level estate or inheritance taxes may still apply, with some states exemptions as low as $1 million. More importantly, the absence of a plan exposes your assets to probate court oversight and default state laws, which often don’t reflect your personal wishes.

    The Probate Pitfall: Delays, Costs, and Public Scrutiny

    Without a will or trust, your estate goes through probate, a court-supervised process to validate your assets, pay debts, and distribute what’s left. For families below the exemption, this can be particularly burdensome because smaller estates often lack the liquid cash to cover fees without selling assets.

    • Time Delays: Probate can take 9 to 18 months or longer, tying up assets when your family needs them most. Imagine your spouse unable to access joint accounts or sell a home during this period.
    • Financial Costs: Expect fees for attorneys, executors, and court filings to eat up 3 to 7% of your estate’s value. For a $5 million estate, that’s potentially $150,000 to $350,000 gone; funds that could have supported your heirs.
    • Loss of Privacy: Probate is public record, meaning anyone can access details about your assets, debts, and beneficiaries. This invites unwanted attention, from scammers to distant relatives.

    In contrast, a common option is a revocable living trust, which allows assets to pass directly to heirs, bypassing probate entirely. It’s a straightforward tool that saves time and money while maintaining confidentiality.

    Intestacy Laws: When the State Decides for You

    If you die intestate (without a will), state laws dictate asset distribution. These rules are rigid and may not align with your intentions:

    • Spousal and Child Shares: In most states, your spouse gets a portion (e.g., one-third to one-half), with the rest divided among children. If you have no children, assets might go to parents or siblings.
    • Blended Families: Stepchildren or unmarried partners often receive nothing under intestacy, leading to disputes. I’ve advised clients in second marriages where this oversight disinherited beloved step kids.
    • Minor Children: Without named guardians, courts decide who raises your kids (potentially a relative you wouldn’t choose). Plus, minors’ inheritances are managed by court-appointed conservators until age 18, with restrictions on use.

    These defaults can fracture families. A simple will lets you specify guardians, create trusts for minors (e.g., to delay distributions until age 25 or 30), and include non-traditional heirs like charities or friends.

    Family Conflicts and Emotional Toll

    The absence of clear instructions often sparks arguments among heirs. Who gets the family home? How are sentimental items divided? Without a plan, emotions run high, and legal battles can ensue. Court records show that intestate estates are more likely to result in contested probates, costing thousands in legal fees and eroding relationships.

    For families (even those under $15 million), assets like real estate, investments, or businesses add complexity. Without powers of attorney or healthcare directives, incapacity (e.g., from illness) can lead to court-appointed guardians, further complicating matters.

    Overlooked Tax and Financial Implications

    While federal estate taxes aren’t a concern below the exemption, other taxes can bite:

    • State Estate/Inheritance Taxes: 17 states and the District of Columbia impose these, with exemptions ranging from $1 million to $13.99 million. Families in high-tax states could face unexpected bills.
    • Income Taxes on Inherited Assets: Heirs may owe capital gains taxes on appreciated assets. Proper planning, like stepped-up basis rules, can minimize this, but without it, the IRS takes a larger share.
    • Retirement Accounts and Life Insurance: These pass via beneficiary designations, not wills. Outdated or missing designations can send funds to ex-spouses or trigger probate.

    Additionally, without a plan, your estate might miss opportunities for charitable deductions or spousal portability, which allows surviving spouses to use unused exemptions.

    Why Plan Now? It’s Simpler Than You Think

    Estate planning isn’t just for the ultra-wealthy, it’s for anyone who cares about their family’s future. Start with basics:

    1. A Will: Outlines asset distribution and names executors/guardians.
    2. Trusts: For privacy, probate avoidance, and control over distributions.
    3. Powers of Attorney: For financial and healthcare decisions if you’re incapacitated.
    4. Advanced Care Directive: also know as a living will aides in healthcare decisions (e.g. during incapacitation.)
    5. Beneficiary Reviews: Update IRAs, 401(k)s, and insurance annually.

    Where Do I Even Begin?

    Stand alone attorneys and online legal services can cost thousands to produce generic documents. As a client with Ten Ring Wealth you have unlimited access to the most comprehensive digital estate planning solution on the market, provided at no cost to you through Ten Ring Wealth Advisors partnership with Wealth.com. 

    If any of this resonates with you. Contact me today to discuss tailoring an estate plan for your needs. Your family will thank you.


    Sean Hummel, is a CETRIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM specializing in high-net-worth families. With over 10 years of experience, he partners with CPAs and estate-planning attorneys to help clients preserve wealth, minimize taxes, and transfer legacies exactly as intended.

    XY Investment Solutions DBA Ten Ring Wealth Advisors does not provide tax or legal advice. The tax and estate planning information offered is general in nature. It is provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal or tax advice. Always consult an attorney or tax professional regarding your specific legal or tax situation

    The opinions expressed in any commentary posted on this site are solely those of the individual author and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of XYIS. These opinions are based on information available at the time of posting and are subject to change without notice. XYIS does not commit to updating any posted positions or commentary to reflect subsequent developments. While the information and reasoning used to form these opinions are believed to be from reliable sources, XYIS does not verify this information, and no guarantee is provided regarding its accuracy, completeness, or validity. XYIS disclaims any and all liability for actions taken or not taken based on the content of this site. No warranty, express or implied, is given in connection with the content provided.

  • The UHNW 2025 Year-End Playbook: Which 7 Strategic Moves Should I Make Before December 31, 2025?

    The UHNW 2025 Year-End Playbook: Which 7 Strategic Moves Should I Make Before December 31, 2025?

    By Sean Hummel, CFP®

    November 16, 2025

    “The wealthiest families don’t chase tax breaks — they anticipate the terrain.”

    The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) has reshaped the 2025 landscape in ways that quietly favor proactive households. Below are seven moves worth noting.


    Move #1: The $77,500 After-Tax Window Remains Open

    A rarely discussed 401(k) provision (IRS Notice 2024-2) continues to permit significant after-tax contributions followed by in-plan conversions.

    For households with robust cash flow, this channel offers a way to shift capital into tax-free growth — provided employer plan documents allow it.


    Move #2: State & Local Tax Dynamics Have Shifted

    The new $40,000 federal ceiling on itemized state and local tax deductions often referred to as SALT pairs with pass-through entity tax elections in 36 states. An additional nine states have no income tax. The residents of the following states without this option. Delaware, Maine, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Vermont)

    High-property-tax jurisdictions (NY, CA, CT) now present a different arithmetic for operating companies and real estate holdings.


    Move #3: Appreciated Securities Carry Hidden Leverage

    When public equities with low cost basis are transferred to a donor-advised fund, the interplay of Section 170(b)(1)(A) and Section 170(e) can neutralize capital-gains exposure while preserving deduction capacity.

    Timing matters: the benefit compounds when multiple years of giving are accelerated into a single tax year.


    Move #4: Required Minimum Distributions Can Vanish Silently

    For those 70.5 years of age or older, direct charitable transfers up to $108,000 satisfy RMD obligations without inflating adjusted gross income.

    This tactic can influence not only income tax, but also Medicare premium thresholds and Social Security benefit taxation. 


    Move #5: Qualified Small Business Stock Rules Reward Patience

    Section 1202 continues to exclude up to $10 million in gains per spouse, per qualifying C-corporation, provided the five-year holding clock is met.

    Founders and early investors often discover multiple “stacks” across entities — a detail easily overlooked in concentrated portfolios.


    Move #6: Bonus Depreciation Retains Front-Loaded Power

    The 100% immediate expensing election  applies to certain real estate improvements and syndicated investments placed in service after July, 19 2025. (Section 168(k)(8))

    Material participation requirements remain the gating factor for offsetting ordinary income.

    The OBBBA also introduces new Section 168(n), which allows a 100% deduction for “qualified production property”. This includes domestic real property used in manufacturing, refining, or agricultural production.


    Move #7: Annual Exclusion Climbs to $19,000

    Indexed inflation adjustments now permit $19,000 per donee without touching lifetime estate/gift exemption.

    When combined with five-year 529 acceleration or direct payment of tuition/medical expenses, the leverage multiplies across generations.(Rev. Proc. 2024-40)


    Closing Note

    The most effective UHNW strategies rarely involve heroic moves.

    They emerge from quiet alignment between legislative intent, family objectives, and mathematical reality.

    If any of these moves resonates with you, we can see if you are in a position to take action.


    Disclosure

    The opinions expressed in any commentary posted on this site are solely those of the individual author and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of XYIS. These opinions are based on information available at the time of posting and are subject to change without notice. XYIS does not commit to updating any posted positions or commentary to reflect subsequent developments. While the information and reasoning used to form these opinions are believed to be from reliable sources, XYIS does not verify this information, and no guarantee is provided regarding its accuracy, completeness, or validity. XYIS disclaims any and all liability for actions taken or not taken based on the content of this site. No warranty, express or implied, is given in connection with the content provided.