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May, 2006 Technical Newsletter
Provided by Leimberg Information Services
See
other issues.
Florida Legislature Repeals
Intangibles Tax
Ding
Dong, the wicked witch is dead
.
LISI
Commentator Jeffrey A. Baskies , a partner in the
Fort Lauderdale, Florida office of Ruden McClosky
and frequent Estate Planning Journal author
wanted LISI members to be among the first to know.
Consider the estate planning implications of Florida's
latest tactic to make it more appealing as a domicile.
Executive Summary
''The insidious
intangibles tax is no longer with us, which is great,''
Governor Bush said, in an Associated Press quote.
Last
night (April 26), the Florida Senate voted 30-9 passing a
bill to repeal the state's annual intangible personal
property tax. Previously, on March 23rd, the Florida
House voted overwhelmingly (100-20) to repeal the annual
intangible personal property tax. Governor Bush is
expected to sign the bill into law immediately. The
repeal will be effective as of January 1, 2007.
Facts
In
general, Florida residents benefit from a very
tax-friendly jurisdiction:
There is no state income
tax.
There are frequent tax
holidays and refunds.
There is no state estate
tax.
The "Save our Homesteads"
law caps annual increases in property values for real
property taxes at the lesser of 3% or the CPI. (Article
VII, §4(c) of the Florida Constitution.)
Now,
there is no intangible personal property tax either!
Prior
to passage of this new bill repealing the intangibles tax,
Florida imposed a tax on residents for the value of their
intangible assets (generally, stocks, bonds [excluding
Florida municipal bonds], mutual funds, options, notes
receivable, interests in LLCs or stock in corporations and
other similar assets). (For a discussion of how the
intangibles tax worked and what assets were subject to it,
see the Dept. of Revenue's website:
www.myflorida.com/dor.)
However, many forms of investments were exempt from the
tax including Florida municipal bonds, intangibles inside
retirement accounts, life insurance or annuities, and
other forms of investments.
Also,
the intangibles tax rate has been reduced over the past
several years to .5 mills in 2006 (that's $500 per every
$1 million of taxable intangibles). And there is a
$250,000 exemption per resident.
So,
given the exemption ($500,000 per couple), the wide
variety of investments that avoided the tax (including
client's retirement plans which for many held most of
their intangible assets), and the relatively low rate, the
intangible tax had a relatively minimal impact on all but
the richest of residents (who generally didn't pay it
either see discussion below on intangible tax trusts).
For example, a married couple with $3,500,000 in
intangible assets subject to the tax only owed $1,500 in
taxes.
But
even for clients subject to a substantial amount of
intangible tax, the tax was simple enough to avoid. The
clients merely had to set up irrevocable trusts and move
their taxable intangibles into the name of the trust
before the end of the year. The trustee could even be the
client's spouse, or anyone else trusted with the funds,
including residents of Florida. These so-called FLINTs
(Florida intangible tax trusts) or FLITEs (Florida
intangible tax exempt trusts) were sanctioned by the DOR
and a basic roadmap was set out right in the statute and
regulations. See Chapter 199, Florida Statutes and Rule
12C-2.0063 of the Florida Administrative Code.
Now,
the good news for Florida residents (and financial
advisers although not so much for Florida estate
planners) is that residents no longer need to bother
creating and funding such trusts.
Comment:
The
repeal of the Florida Intangible Tax seems a natural step
in the progression of Florida's favorable tax policy.
Florida obviously wants to be considered a tax-favorable
haven for its residents and wants to attract new
residents. Florida uses the tax-favored status to lure
both retirees and working people. For example, Governor
Bush has touted the tax-favored status of Florida in his
efforts to recruit new businesses to Florida. Thus, the
repeal of the intangible tax fits in the Governor's
mission of an inexorable march toward tax freedom.
Now,
when coupled with the lack of an income tax and the lack
of an estate tax, Florida looks even more favorable as a
residence when compared to the places many of its
residents are moving from the northeast and the
mid-west. In states like New York, New Jersey and
Massachusetts, for example, it is compelling for residents
to shift to Florida to avoid the compound effect of paying
5-10% + in annual income taxes and 10%+ (16% even) in
state estate taxes.
Also,
given the meteoric rise in many Florida property values,
the move to become a Florida resident has also been pushed
by the Save Our Homes cap on real property taxes. Many of
our non-Florida clients have decided they need to become
Florida residents just to stem their ever-growing real
property taxes.
HOPE THIS HELPS YOU HELP OTHERS MAKE A POSITIVE
DIFFERENCE!
Jeff Baskies
Edited by Steve Leimberg
CITE AS:
Steve Leimberg's Estate Planning Newsletter # 958 (April
27, 2006) at
http://www.leimbergservices.com Copyright
2006 Leimberg Information Services, Inc. (LISI)
Reproduction in Any Form or Forwarding to Any Person
Prohibited Without Express Permission
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