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Practice Areas /
Tax / Estate and Gift Taxes
Estate and Gift Taxes
Lanier Ford Shaver & Payne assists our clients in planning their estates to minimize as much
estate and gift tax as possible. Our attorneys draft wills and create trust arrangements which allow
our clients to provide beneficiaries with asset management and protection, while transferring assets
at the lowest overall tax cost.
Our attorneys regularly prepare the following estate planning documents:
- Wills which contain provisions that address estate tax issues while implementing the client's
dispositive intent.
- Childrens' trusts which apply income and principal for the education and support of a child with
principal distributions required at stated ages, such as one-third at ages 25, 30, and 35.
- Credit shelter trusts that take advantage of the amount exempt from estate tax on the death of
the first spouse.
- Marital trusts, including qualified terminable interest property trusts (QTIP trusts) designed to
provide a lifetime benefit for the surviving spouse with the balance of the trust passing at the
spouse's death to designated beneficiaries. This type of trust is typically used to provide asset
management for the surviving spouse or to insure that the property in the trust will pass to designated
beneficiaries, such as children.
- Generation-skipping trusts designed to take advantage of the maximum amount that may be
passed to second-generation beneficiaries, such as grandchildren, without incurring the
generation-skipping transfer tax.
- Revocable trusts set up during the client's lifetime to hold the client's assets and pass such
assets outside of probate to named beneficiaries in a tax-advantaged manner.
- Irrevocable insurance trusts designed to be the owner and beneficiary of life insurance so that
the insurance proceeds are not subject to estate tax upon the insured's death.
- Grantor-retained annuity trusts (GRATs) used in passing assets to children or other beneficiaries
while retaining an income interest for a term of years.
- Personal residence trusts used to pass the client's principal residence or second home to children
or other beneficiaries while retaining the right to use such residence for a period of years.
- Family limited partnerships and limited liability companies (LLCs) used to transfer assets to
family members at a discount from fair market value.