Estate, Gift, and Generation-Skipping Taxes

  • Lessons

    15

  • Duration

    119 Minutes

Instructors

Kirby Rosplock

Kirby Rosplock (Ph.D.)

Born into a very successful enterprising family, Kirby learned family wealth basics the way most affluent offspring do (or don’t) Read More

About Course

This module introduces the U.S. wealth transfer taxation system, including estate tax, gift tax, and generation-skipping transfer tax. Learners explore how these taxes developed, how they are calculated, and why they matter even though they represent a small share of federal revenue. The emphasis is on helping learners connect tax concepts to real decisions about timing, documentation, asset selection, advisor engagement, and family preparedness. Read More

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Overview

  • Learning Objectives

    2 Minutes

Taxation and Trusts Overview

  • Wealth Transfer Taxation System

    4 Minutes
  • Origins of Wealth Transfer Taxes

    8 Minutes
  • The Burden on Heirs When Settling the Estate

    10 Minutes

Understanding Estate Taxes

  • Calculating Federal Estate Taxes

    11 Minutes
  • Ways to Reduce Federal Estate Taxes

    10 Minutes
  • Mini Case: Joe and Sandy Green’s Estate Tax Planning

    10 Minutes
  • State Estate and Inheritance Tax

    10 Minutes

Understanding Generation-Skipping Taxes

  • Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax

    4 Minutes

Understanding Gift Taxes

  • Federal Gift Tax

    10 Minutes
  • Gift Tax vs Estate Tax Case Study

    10 Minutes
  • The Gift Tax and Trusts

    6 Minutes
  • Homework I: Where Does Federal Government Revenue Come From?

    20 Minutes

Other Taxes on Trusts

  • Income Taxation of Grantor Trusts

    4 Minutes

Conclusion

  • Wrap Up

    30 Seconds

Test Your Knowledge

  • Quiz Locked

How do estate, gift, and generation-skipping taxes shape decisions about transferring wealth?

Estate, Gift, and Generation-Skipping Taxes (formerly Foundations of Tax Module 2) introduces the U.S. wealth transfer taxation system, including estate tax, gift tax, and generation-skipping transfer tax. Learners explore how these taxes developed, how they are calculated, and why they matter even though they represent a small share of federal revenue. The module also examines the practical and emotional burden placed on heirs when estates are not organized, as well as planning strategies that may reduce tax exposure, preserve liquidity, and support clearer transfer intentions. The emphasis is on helping learners connect tax concepts to real decisions about timing, documentation, asset selection, advisor engagement, and family preparedness.

What You’ll Be Able to Do on the Other Side

  • Distinguish among estate tax, gift tax, and generation-skipping transfer tax so that you can recognize which transfer events may create tax exposure during life, at death, or across generations.
  • Interpret the basic steps in a federal estate tax calculation so that you can better understand how gross estate value, deductions, lifetime gifts, credits, and exemptions affect potential tax liability.
  • Evaluate common estate tax reduction strategies so that you can ask more informed questions about lifetime gifting, trusts, charitable planning, liquidity, and asset transfer timing.
  • Compare lifetime gifting with transfers at death so that you can recognize how basis rules, appreciation, control, and capital gains consequences may affect planning choices.
  • Identify documentation and decision gaps that can burden heirs so that you can better appreciate the importance of organized records, clear bequests, accessible information, and communicated intentions.

The Experience

This module combines self-paced reading, historical context, tax calculation walkthroughs, case studies, applied examples, and reflection prompts. The experience includes practical planning scenarios, including the burden on heirs when estates are not in order, Joe and Sandy Green’s estate tax planning case, the Wilson family gift-versus-estate tax case, and examples involving Crummey powers, trust gifts, annual exclusions, and lifetime exemptions. Learners are prompted to connect tax planning to family priorities, liquidity needs, beneficiary impact, advisor conversations, and the reminder not to let the “tax tail wag the dog.”

Prerequisites: Module 1 - Introduction to Taxes - Recommended  

Estimated Completion Time: 1 hour

Featured Resources:      

  • Don't Leave a Mess by Sandra Pollack
  • Estate & Trust Administration for Dummies, 2nd ed by Margaret Atkins Munro,EA & Kathryn A. Murphy, Esq
  • Form 709 Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service
  • "When a QPRT is Not a Qualified Place to Park Your Residence" by Amiel Z. Weinstock
  • "Do I Really Have to Send These Crummey Notices?" by David Gonzales

Customers Review

4.7 out of 5

3 customer ratings

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Morgan A.
May 04, 2026
n/a
Kelly Ratner M.
Apr 26, 2026
I need to learn about trusts and this was very informative.
Rebecca K.
Jan 08, 2024
Great. Really clarified things for us.