Industry Insights

California Proposes a State Gift and Estate Tax Beginning 2021

The California Senate recently introduced a bill, California SB 378, which would impose a California gift, estate and generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax beginning on Jan. 1, 2021, on all gratuitous transfers during the life and on death of a California resident.

The proposed California gift and transfer tax rate will be equal to the marginal federal transfer tax rate imposed on lifetime gifts and transfers at death—essentially a 40% tax. While the current federal exclusion for gift and estate tax is $11.4 million, California SB 378 provides for a much lower exclusion of $3.5 million. The Senate bill provides for a full credit given for all federal estate and gift tax paid. Practically speaking, a California resident with an estate of $100 million would pay the same California estate tax as a California resident with an estate of $11.4 million.

Also, California SB 378 would impose a state GST tax at a 40% rate on transfers to related persons more than one generation younger to the donor, such as grandchildren, and gifts to unrelated persons who are more than 37.5 years younger than the donor. Again, the proposed legislation would provide for a separate $3.5 million exclusion for the GST tax, with no index for inflation, compared with a federal inflation-adjusted GST exclusion of $11.4 million. Similar to the state gift and estate tax, the California bill provides for a full credit for any federal GST tax paid.

In its existing form, California SB 378 doesn’t provide for a separate state marital deduction, commonly referred to as the qualified terminable interest property election. This is most likely an oversight and is expected to be corrected in future versions of the California bill. Additionally, there’s no provision for the executor of a deceased spouse’s estate to port or transfer the deceased spouse’s unused $3.5 million California exclusion to the surviving spouse. Without the availability of these two important estate-planning tools, the planning and administration of estates for married couples residing in California will likely become increasingly complex.

California SB 378 also proposes creating the "Children’s Wealth and Opportunity Building Fund," a special fund in the state treasury that would receive all of the taxes, interest, penalties and other amounts collected as a result of the state gift, estate and GST tax. The purpose of this fund is to “directly address and alleviate socioeconomic inequality and build assets among people that have historically lacked them.”

The proposed bill, if passed by California's Legislature and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom later this year, will have to be ratified by voters in the November 2020 statewide election. While the legislature and governor are proponents of this new tax, it’s less clear if California voters will endorse another layer of state tax. However, the inclusion of the Children’s Wealth and Opportunity Building Fund may have some impact on convincing more voters to support the bill.

Please click here to read the article.