Minnesota estates may face federal estate tax (40% above ~$13.99M / individual in 2025) plus state estate or inheritance tax — most estates use lifetime gifting + trusts to minimize tax.
Published May 8, 2026
## Estate-tax planning in Minnesota
Federal and Minnesota estate / inheritance tax can take a significant bite out of large estates. Strategic planning during life can dramatically reduce or eliminate the bite.
## Federal estate tax
**2025 thresholds:**
- **Individual exemption: $13.99M**
- **Married couple: ~$27.98M** (with portability)
- **Annual gift exclusion: $19,000 per recipient**
- **Lifetime gift / GST exemption: $13.99M** (counts against estate exemption)
- **Tax rate above exemption: 40%**
**2026 sunset (TCJA expiration):**
- TCJA passed 2017 doubled exemption
- WAS scheduled to sunset Dec 31, 2025
- Cut exemption roughly in half (~$7M individual)
- BUT extension passed → exemption remains elevated
- Always check current law as Congress acts
## State estate / inheritance taxes
**As of 2026, states with their own estate / inheritance taxes:**
**Estate tax states (paid by estate):**
- Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, DC
- Most have lower exemptions than federal ($1M-$13M typical)
- Rates 10%-20% typical
**Inheritance tax states (paid by recipient):**
- Iowa (phasing out), Kentucky, Maryland (also has estate), Nebraska, New Jersey, Pennsylvania
- Often graduated by relationship (spouses + children pay less)
**No state estate / inheritance tax** in most states (including TX, FL, CA, etc.)
## Generation-Skipping Transfer (GST) tax
**Federal GST tax:**
- 40% on transfers to grandchildren (skipping children)
- Same exemption as estate tax
- Important for dynasty planning
- Inclusion ratio determines actual tax
## Common estate tax planning strategies
**1. Annual gifting:**
- Use annual exclusion ($19K/2025)
- Married couple: $38K per recipient
- Doesn't count against lifetime exemption
- Compound effect over years
- Children + grandchildren common targets
**2. 529 plans:**
- Education-specific tax benefits
- 5-year forward gift permitted ($95K single contribution per donor)
- Owner retains control
- ${s.name}-specific state tax benefits
**3. Lifetime gifting (using exemption):**
- Use exemption while alive (avoid future tax)
- Asset appreciation occurs OUTSIDE estate
- Permanent reduction of taxable estate
- Best for assets expected to appreciate
**4. Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT):**
- Removes life insurance from estate
- Premiums paid via Crummey gifts
- Trust beneficiaries receive tax-free death benefit
- Avoids paying estate tax with insurance proceeds
**5. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT):**
- Transfer asset to trust, retain annuity for term
- If asset appreciates above IRS rate (Section 7520), excess passes tax-free
- Risk: estate inclusion if grantor dies during term
- Effective with appreciating assets
**6. Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT):**
- One spouse creates trust for other
- Uses creator's exemption
- Other spouse can benefit during life
- Effective for high-net-worth couples
**7. Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT):**
- Transfer home to trust, retain right to live in it
- Discount to gift value
- Asset removed from estate after term
- Risk: estate inclusion if grantor dies during term
**8. Charitable Lead Trust (CLT) / Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT):**
- Combine charity + family planning
- Tax deductions during life
- Strategic for charitable goals
**9. Family Limited Partnership (FLP) / Family LLC:**
- Hold family assets
- Discount valuation for minority / non-marketable interests
- Centralized management of family wealth
- IRS scrutiny if mere tax shelter
**10. Dynasty trust:**
- Multi-generational wealth transfer
- Avoids estate tax in each generation
- States with no rule against perpetuities (DE, NV, AK, SD) preferred
- GST exemption critical
**11. Step-up in basis preservation:**
- Heirs receive stepped-up basis at death
- Sometimes better to hold appreciated assets until death
- Compare to gifting carryover basis
- 1014(e) limit for assets gifted-back-to-deceased
**12. Defective grantor trust (IDGT):**
- Income tax to grantor (further reducing estate)
- Estate tax exclusion on assets
- Combined with GRAT or SLAT
## Portability — ESSENTIAL for married couples
**Deceased Spousal Unused Exclusion (DSUE):**
- Surviving spouse can use deceased's unused exemption
- Doubles couple's effective exemption
- Requires Form 706 estate-tax return at first death
- ELECTION REQUIRED — easy to miss
**Even if estate is below threshold, file Form 706 to elect portability!**
## Marital deduction
**Unlimited marital deduction:**
- Transfers between spouses tax-free
- Both during life and at death
- Spouse must be U.S. citizen (otherwise QDOT required)
- Defers tax to second death
- Combined with portability + bypass trusts for optimization
## Charitable deduction
**Estate tax charitable deduction:**
- Unlimited deduction for charitable bequests
- Reduces taxable estate dollar-for-dollar
- Combined with charitable trusts during life
- Public charities + private foundations both qualify
## Common mistakes
- **Doing nothing** — even modest planning helps
- **Old documents** — estate plans need updating
- **Forgetting portability** — costs surviving spouse
- **Improper trust funding** — assets must be retitled
- **Ignoring state tax** — high-tax states need state-specific planning
- **Failing to coordinate beneficiary designations** with plan
- **Insurance owned by insured** — included in estate
- **Joint property assumptions** — bypasses planning
- **Outdated POA / healthcare directive**
## Documents typically needed
- **Will**
- **Revocable living trust**
- **Durable power of attorney (financial)**
- **Healthcare power of attorney + living will**
- **HIPAA authorization**
- **Beneficiary designations** (retirement, life insurance, TOD)
- **Letter of instruction (informal)**
- **Digital asset directive**
- **${s.name}-specific forms**
## When you need professional help
**Hire estate-planning attorney + CPA team for:**
- Estates approaching exemption ($10M+)
- Multi-state property
- Closely-held businesses
- Blended families
- Special-needs beneficiaries
- Charitable goals
- Asset protection concerns
- International issues
## What you should do
If your Minnesota estate may exceed $5M (or you have specific concerns): consult an estate-planning attorney with high-net-worth experience. Many Minnesota estate-planning attorneys offer flat fees for plan creation. Annual review recommended (especially around tax law changes). CPAs help with specific calculations + Form 706 returns.
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*This guide is general information about federal and Minnesota law as of mid-2026 and is not legal or tax advice. Estate tax planning is highly technical. Talk to a licensed Minnesota estate-planning attorney + CPA about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.