Pillsbury Madison & Sutro LLP Tax Page [7.9K]

This memorandum has been prepared by the estate planning group at Pillsbury Madison & Sutro LLP and is part of the Pillsbury Madison & Sutro LLP Tax Page, a World Wide Web demonstration project. Comments are welcome on the design or content of this material.

Estate Planning
Memoranda [1.0K]

Further information can be obtained from William J. Hoehler, a partner in the firm's San Francisco office.

This material is not intended, and cannot be considered, as legal advice or opinion.


Estate Planning for Non-Resident Spouses

This memorandum discusses generally the U.S. gift tax and estate tax issues to consider for a married couple when the husband or wife or both are not citizens of the United States.

In general, the U.S. gift tax and estate tax laws permit unlimited tax-free transfers of property between spouses if the transferee spouse (i.e., the spouse receiving property) is a U.S. citizen. This "marital deduction" often is said to reflect the view that a husband and wife represent a single economic unit, and only transfers from that unit to third parties (e.g., children) should be subject to gift and estate tax. But the marital deduction is not allowed if the transferee spouse is not a U.S. citizen, even if the non-citizen spouse is a permanent resident of the United States. Although widely criticized, this rule is based on a concern that the non-citizen spouse might move to another country and thereafter transfer property he or she received tax-free without being subject to U.S. gift and estate taxes.

Estate Planning During Life

Each year, you may give up to $100,000 of property to your spouse without gift tax even if your spouse is a non-citizen. You might want to undertake a series of annual gifts. For example, if the wealth between you is substantially unequal, these gifts will tend to equalize the wealth between you. If only one of you is a citizen, gifts from the citizen to the non-citizen spouse will minimize the effect of the marital deduction restrictions at death (discussed below).

Estate Planning At Death

At death, gifts to your non-citizen spouse can qualify for the marital deduction and avoid estate tax only if the property is held in a special trust for the non-citizen spouse's benefit, sometimes called a "qualified domestic trust" or "QDOT trust."

In planning your estate, we suggest that you first consider your objectives without the complications presented by the citizenship issue. You first should decide whether to make your gifts outright to your spouse or in a trust for your spouse's benefit with the property eventually to pass to other named beneficiaries. Once you have made this decision (outright versus trust), you can decide how best to qualify your spouse's gift for the marital deduction.

Outright Gift to Non-citizen Spouse

If your estate plan includes an outright gift to your spouse, we suggest that your will make this outright gift even if your spouse is not a U.S. citizen. If your spouse is a non-citizen, your will also should include an option for your spouse to "disclaim" part or all of the outright gift; if your spouse then disclaims, or refuses, the gift, the property would instead pass to a QDOT trust for your spouse's benefit. This structure gives your spouse several choices: