Planning Providing for your loved ones during your lifetime

Adam Frank

Managing Director, Head of Wealth Planning and Advice, J.P. Morgan Wealth Management

Updated Dec 17, 2024 |
4 min read

Thinking about your legacy and what you want your wealth to accomplish in the long run is a core part of any estate planning journey. While you can structure your plan to take care of your loved ones after you pass away, you can also transfer assets to them during your lifetime, allowing you to see the benefits that your assets bring to them and perhaps reap some tax benefits as well. 

Let’s cover the basics first: What exactly is a gift?

 

A gift occurs when one person – the donor – transfers something of value to any other person or entity – the beneficiary, donee or recipient – and receives nothing of value in return. This includes both clear gifts (e.g., giving money to a donee) and perhaps less obvious gifts (e.g., allowing someone to live rent-free in real estate that you own).

 

Note that gifts can sometimes be confused with sales or loans, so it is important to structure your gift properly.

 

When people transfer assets, they may be required to pay gift tax for transfers during lifetime, or estate tax for transfers at death. The taxes are required if the value of the transferred assets exceeds certain tax exemptions. When you make a gift during your life, your beneficiaries (and not you) own all of the appreciation on the gift from the date of the gift onward, so the appreciation is not subject to estate tax upon your death. This is a common strategy to reduce future estate tax liability.

 

One of the many reasons to work with a lawyer when structuring your gift is that a gift must be complete, that is, you may not retain any benefit from the gift – including receiving income from it – in order for it and its appreciation to be removed from your estate.

 

With all of this in mind, is giving while living a good fit for you? Here are a few considerations:

Which tax exclusions and exemptions apply to you?

 

There are a number of reasons why people make gifts. Fundamentally, donors want to take financial care of their beneficiaries, whether those are individuals or charities. However, gifts are often motivated in part by potential tax benefits.

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As you contemplate whether gifting makes sense for you, it is important to understand the available exemptions or exclusions from transfer taxes (gift and estate taxes)1:

 

  • Marital deduction: transfers between spouses who are U.S. citizens are free of any transfer tax; this means that these transfers will not use up any of the donor’s gift or estate tax exemption.
  • Medical and education expenses: payments you make directly to a medical provider or educational institution on behalf of a beneficiary for qualified expenses are exempt from transfer tax.
  • Annual gift tax exclusion: you are able to make gifts up to a specific dollar amount to an unlimited number of beneficiaries each year free of any gift tax. These gifts can be made as one single gift or in multiple stages throughout the year. The cap is $19,000 in 2025, or $38,000 for married couples. As an example, a married donor with four children, after consulting his or her spouse, can give $38,000 to each of the children in 2025 as annual exclusion gifts, or $152,000 in total, without paying any gift tax or using any gift tax exemption. A gift that exceeds the annual exclusion begins to count toward your lifetime gift and estate tax exemption.
  • Gift and estate tax exemption: the aggregate value of transfers you make during lifetime or at death, up to a total of $13.99 million in 2025, is exempt from gift or estate tax. Unlike the annual exclusion, this is a one-time exemption, not per beneficiary. You can make one gift of the full $13.99 million or multiple gifts that add up to $13.99 million, but once you’ve reached that limit every additional gift will be subject to gift tax. Lifetime transfers that exceed the annual gift tax exclusion each year use up a portion of this exemption.
    • Whatever amount of the gift tax exemption that is not used up during lifetime will be available at death as an estate tax exemption; however, many people choose to gift during lifetime rather than to make gifts at death with the hope that their lifetime gifts will appreciate for the benefit of the donees.
    • People who wish to use their gift tax exemption often do so in trust when the gift amounts are large and if they expect that these gifts will last for multiple generations.2
  • Generation Skipping Transfer tax exemption: the GST tax applies to gifts to individuals who are more than one generation removed from the donor—often grandchildren and more remote descendants, or trusts for their benefit. The aggregate value of transfers during lifetime or at death to those beneficiaries, capped at $13.99 million in 2025, is exempt from GST tax, similar to the gift and estate tax exemption.

 

Note: a single gift could incur both gift tax and GST tax and therefore can use up both gift and GST tax exemption if the donees (or their trusts) are more than one generation away from the donor. Often gifts to which the GST tax exemption applies use up both exemptions and are made in trust since the gifts are intended to last for multiple generations.3

What should you do to make a gift?

 

Once you decide that you want to make a gift, you need to think about what you want to give. The easiest way to gift is to write a check, wire money, or transfer securities to a donee. As long as the amount gifted during the calendar year does not exceed the annual exclusion, you do not need to do anything else. No one owes any tax on the transfer and no one needs to report the gift. Note, however, that if the amount gifted throughout the year does exceed the annual exclusion (or if you are married and would like to use your spouse’s annual exclusion), you will have to file a gift tax return to report the gift and any exemptions you use. Be sure to speak with your tax professional when making gifts since you may need to file a gift tax return.

 

Final thoughts for your gifting strategy

 

The best assets to give are often those that you expect to appreciate in value – namely those whose value you believe is low relative to what it should be or will be in the future. In some instances, it may not make sense to give assets that already have embedded gains, since you would effectively be giving an embedded income tax liability. In addition, an asset whose fair market value warrants a valuation discount – because of its lack of marketability, lack of control, or associated restrictions – may be an appropriate asset to give since you would be able to transfer more value for less gift tax exemption when making the gift.

 

  • If you wish to gift an asset that is hard to value, you will have to obtain an appraisal of that asset and file the appraisal with a gift tax return. There is often a cost associated with obtaining an appraisal. Gifts of cash and marketable securities generally do not require an appraisal.

 

It is important to work with your tax professional, as well as with your tax and legal counsel, when making your gifts to ensure that these general concepts of gifting apply to your plan.

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Adam Frank

Managing Director, Head of Wealth Planning and Advice, J.P. Morgan Wealth Management

Adam leads J.P. Morgan Wealth Management's Wealth Planning and Advice team, which is responsible for wealth planning, thought leadership and strategic planning for individual clients. This national group of former practicing lawyers, CPA ...More

Adam leads J.P. Morgan Wealth Management's Wealth Planning and Advice team, which is responsible for wealth planning, thought leadership and strategic planning for individual clients. This national group of former practicing lawyers, CPAs, Certified Financial Planners™ and other financial professionals provides expertise to individual clients in estate and tax planning strategies, financial planning and modeling, retirement planning, restricted and control stock and stock option management, business succession planning, pre- and post- transactional planning, concentrated position management and other personal planning strategies. The team provides internal training to the J.P. Morgan Wealth Management sales force on these topics and also creates content for distribution to the public.

 

Prior to his current role, Adam led the Wealth Management department for J.P. Morgan Securities and for Bear Stearns. He has extensive experience with sophisticated family business and succession planning, philanthropic planning, estate and gift tax management techniques, discounted gifting transactions, estate litigation, goals-based planning, asset allocation, monetization and hedging techniques, and the taxation and analysis of employee stock options.

 

Previously, Adam was an attorney at Schulte Roth & Zabel (1998-2001) and Sullivan & Cromwell (1993, 1994-1998), where his practice focused on representing high-net-worth clients and closely held businesses. He started his legal career as a law clerk to Judge Jacob Mishler of the Eastern District of New York (1993-1994).

 

Adam earned a B.A. in psychology from the University of Pennsylvania and a J.D. from Yale Law School.

 

Wealth Planners may work with clients’ tax advisors, but do not provide tax advice.

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Footnotes

  • 1

    These exemptions reflect the Federal transfer tax regime applicable to U.S. citizens and permanent residents (green-card holders); consult with your tax professional to understand your specific state’s transfer tax rules.

  • 2

    There are a number of benefits to making gifts in trust. To understand if a trust might make sense for you, consult your J.P. Morgan representative.

  • 3

    Ibid.

Disclosures

The views, opinions, estimates and strategies expressed herein constitutes the author's judgment based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice, and may differ from those expressed by other areas of J.P. Morgan. This information in no way constitutes J.P. Morgan Resea...

Read more disclosures about this article

The views, opinions, estimates and strategies expressed herein constitutes the author's judgment based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice, and may differ from those expressed by other areas of J.P. Morgan. This information in no way constitutes J.P. Morgan Research and should not be treated as such. You should carefully consider your needs and objectives before making any decisions. For additional guidance on how this information should be applied to your situation, you should consult your advisor.

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