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Illinois Estate Tax The Federal estate tax used to allow a credit for state death taxes. The Illinois estate tax was the amount of the credit allowed under Federal law. Under this scheme the total Illinois and Federal tax was the same as the total Federal tax before the credit. The Federal law has been changed and the credit for state death taxes was phased out. However, the Illinois estate tax is still based on the old Federal credit for estate taxes. Now the Illinois estate tax is the amount that would have been allowed as a credit for state death taxes under the Federal tax before 2002. The net effect is a substantial increase in the total of Illinois and Federal estate taxes. The pre-2002 Federal credit was based on the adjusted taxable estate which is the taxable estate less $60,000. The Federal state death tax credit schedule was (and thus the Illinois estate tax schedule is:
The Illinois tax is based on the Federal adjusted taxable estate and Illinois adopts the same exclusion amounts as Federal law. These exclusion amounts are scheduled to rise as follows:
The Illinois estate tax is based on the Federal adjusted taxable estate. The Illinois Estate Tax is based on amounts over the exclusion amounts. However, Illinois and Federal law have different exclusion amounts. The Federal exclusion amount is $5,000,000 in 2011 and 2012, but Illinois limits the amount to $2,000, 000. The Illinois Estate Tax is computed with respect to the Federal Taxable estate. However, the Illinois Estate Tax is a deduction in computing the Federal Taxable Estate. Thus you have interrelated computations. The Illinois Attorney General's office has software to make the calculation which you can find on their site at www.illinoisattorneygeneral.gov. Many estate plans avoid federal estate tax by saying the marital deduction gift is the least amount that will result in no federal tax. Thus the marital gift is everything over the exclusion amount. The Federal and Illinois exclusion amounts are different so this type of estate plan will result in no federal tax, but some Illinois tax. This could be avoided by increasing the amount of the marital deduction gift to the least amount that will result in no federal or Illinois tax. Unlike the Federal tax, the Illinois tax does not apply to lifetime gifts. || Back
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Illinois
Estate Tax Attorney Donald M. Thompson * 55 W. Monroe #3950;
Chicago, IL 60603 |
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