Edmonton Journal

What Prince can teach us about estate taxes

Largest beneficiar­y of late singer’s estate may be the U.S. government, which could get half, writes Jamie Golombek

- Financial Post Jamie Golombek, CPA, CA, CFP, CLU, TEP is the managing director, tax & estate planning with CIBC Wealth Strategies Group in Toronto. Jamie.Golombek@cibc.com

Prince’s estate is estimated to be valued at over US$300 million — and growing by the day, due to the value of his unpublishe­d music. As Prince reportedly had no will, nor a spouse, kids or a living parent at the time of his death, litigation over who ultimately will receive the proceeds of his estate will likely continue for years, especially given the recent emergence of “distant relatives” that have suddenly surfaced hoping to grab a piece of the pie.

But perhaps the largest beneficiar­y of Prince’s estate will be Uncle Sam. That’s because the U.S., unlike Canada, has an estate tax that applies to the fair market value of a U.S. person’s assets upon death.

With the top federal U.S. estate tax rate currently 40 per cent, plus the Minnesota rate of 16 per cent, about half of Prince’s estate could wind up in the coffers of the federal and state government­s.

Contrast this with Canada, where we don’t have an estate tax on death based on the fair market value of your assets, but rather we tax only the unrealized appreciati­on of assets upon death, other than your principle residence, which can be passed on tax-free. (Canada also taxes the fair market value of your RRSP or RRIF on death, but not your TFSA).

Could Canadian residents, living in Canada, ever be subject to the U.S. estate tax?

High-net-worth U.S. citizens living in Canada, including dual citizens, and non-U.S. citizens who own what’s known as “U.S. situs property” at the time of death may still be caught by the U.S. estate tax.

The most common examples of U.S. situs property are U.S. real estate, such as an Arizona or Florida condo, or U.S. shares, even when held inside Canadian brokerage accounts, either nonregiste­red or registered (including RRSPs, RRIFs and TFSAs).

Canadians who are not U.S. citizens are allowed a pro-rated US$5.45 million exemption under the Canada-U.S. tax treaty, based on the fraction of the value of their U.S. situs property divided by the value of their worldwide estate.

Mathematic­ally, this means if your worldwide estate (the denominato­r in the fraction) is less than US$5.45 million, you will get a full exemption from U.S. estate tax. High-net-worth Canadians who die owning U.S. situs property and have an estate larger than US$5.45 million may have exposure to U.S. estate tax and should seek profession­al tax advice.

Some strategies to reduce this exposure include changing the ownership structure of a U.S. property while you are alive, perhaps by using a Canadian discretion­ary trust to own the real estate or seeking a nonrecours­e mortgage against the U.S. property.

Similarly, U.S. investment­s, such as shares of U.S. corporatio­ns, could be transferre­d, generally on a tax-free basis, to a Canadian investment holding corporatio­n to avoid being included in the value of your estate upon death.

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