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Estate Tax Planning Lawyers

178 Estate Tax Planning lawyers found. Filter by state and city to find attorneys near you.

Jana E. Olson
Jana E. Olson

Jana E. Olson, Attorney at Law

Business LawTax LawBusiness ContractsBusiness Dissolution
Arvada23+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jayson Manahan Aquino
Jayson Manahan Aquino

Jayson Manahan Aquino, Attorney at Law

Tax LawBusiness LawEstate PlanningBusiness Taxes
Garden Grove14+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Tax LawWhite Collar CrimeBusiness LawHealth Care Law
Dallas15+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jeffrey Burton Kahn
Jeffrey Burton Kahn

Jeffrey Burton Kahn, Attorney at Law

Tax LawCannabis & Marijuana LawBusiness TaxesCriminal Tax Litigation
Long Beach37+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jeffrey Burton Kahn
Jeffrey Burton Kahn

Jeffrey Burton Kahn, Attorney at Law

Tax LawCannabis & Marijuana LawBusiness TaxesCriminal Tax Litigation
Contra Costa County37+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jeffrey Ira Fouts
Jeffrey Ira Fouts

Fouts Law Group

Estate PlanningElder LawNursing Home AbuseTax Law
Cherokee County33+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jeffrey Piper
Jeffrey Piper

The Piper Firm

Business LawTax LawSecurities LawBusiness Contracts
Aiea38+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jeffrey S Brown
Jeffrey S Brown

Law Offices of Jeffrey S Brown

Tax LawBusiness LawEstate PlanningReal Estate Law
Athens32+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
BankruptcyConsumer LawTax LawChapter 11 Bankruptcy
Hoboken10+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jessica Malan
Jessica Malan

Malan Law Group

Tax LawEstate PlanningBusiness LawConstruction Law
Badger1+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Business LawTax LawEstate PlanningElder Law
Piscataway51+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
John Perry Willis
John Perry Willis

Law Offices of John Perry Willis

Business LawEnvironmental LawTax LawBusiness Contracts
Baldwin County28+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Tax LawBusiness TaxesCriminal Tax LitigationEstate Tax Planning
Aspen Hill20+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jon Dowat
Jon Dowat

Dowat & Associates

BankruptcyTax LawChapter 11 BankruptcyChapter 13 Bankruptcy
Dupage County21+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jonathan David Mishkin
Jonathan David Mishkin

Mishkin & Partners

Tax LawBusiness LawEstate PlanningBusiness Taxes
Bend20+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
BankruptcyForeclosure DefenseTax LawChapter 11 Bankruptcy
Albany13+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jonathan Sooriash
Jonathan Sooriash

Sooriash Law Office

Tax LawBusiness TaxesCriminal Tax LitigationEstate Tax Planning
Alabaster15+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Jonathan Sooriash
Jonathan Sooriash

Law Offices of Jonathan Sooriash

Tax LawBusiness TaxesCriminal Tax LitigationEstate Tax Planning
Allegheny County15+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation

Estate Tax Planning Lawyers in the United States

The federal estate tax applies to estates exceeding $13.61 million per individual in 2024. That threshold sounds high, but it's set to drop by roughly half after 2025 unless Congress acts. A qualified estate tax planning lawyer helps you structure your wealth to minimize tax exposure and protect what you pass on to your heirs.

What Estate Tax Planning Covers

Estate tax planning focuses on legally reducing the taxes owed when assets transfer at death or during your lifetime. This includes strategies like establishing irrevocable trusts, making structured lifetime gifts, creating family limited partnerships, and using charitable giving vehicles to lower your taxable estate.

Lawyers in this area also handle generation-skipping transfer tax planning, business succession structures, and coordination between federal and state-level estate taxes. Roughly 17 states plus the District of Columbia impose their own estate or inheritance taxes, often with much lower exemption thresholds than the federal level.

When to Hire an Estate Tax Planning Lawyer

  • Your total estate value approaches or exceeds the federal or your state's estate tax exemption threshold
  • You own a family business or significant real estate holdings that could trigger a large tax bill at death
  • You want to establish trusts or gifting strategies that comply with IRS rules while maximizing wealth transfer
  • The scheduled 2026 reduction in the federal exemption amount could affect your estate
  • You've experienced a major life event like a marriage, divorce, or inheritance that changes your financial picture

How the Estate Tax Planning Process Works

Your lawyer starts with a full inventory of your assets — real property, investments, business interests, retirement accounts, and life insurance. They calculate your estimated taxable estate under current law and identify areas where strategic planning can reduce that number.

From there, the lawyer designs a plan using specific legal tools. These might include grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs), qualified personal residence trusts, or annual gift exclusions set at $18,000 per recipient in 2024. The plan gets documented, funded, and reviewed periodically as tax laws change.

How Tax Savings and Financial Outcomes Are Calculated

  • Federal estate tax rate — currently 40% on amounts exceeding the exemption, making the potential savings from proper planning substantial
  • Lifetime gift exclusions — annual and lifetime gift limits allow tax-free wealth transfers that directly reduce the size of the taxable estate
  • Trust structures can freeze asset values at the time of transfer, so future appreciation passes to beneficiaries free of estate tax
  • Charitable remainder trusts and donor-advised funds generate income tax deductions while removing assets from the estate
  • State-level estate taxes vary widely, with exemptions as low as $1 million in some jurisdictions

Frequently Asked Questions

Will I owe estate taxes if my estate is below the federal exemption?

You won't owe federal estate tax, but you might still face state-level estate or inheritance taxes. Several states set their exemption amounts far below the federal threshold. Your lawyer can identify whether your state imposes its own tax and plan accordingly.

How far in advance should I start estate tax planning?

The sooner, the better. Many of the most effective strategies — like annual gifting programs and irrevocable trusts — work best over time. Starting early gives you more flexibility and lets asset appreciation occur outside your taxable estate. Most attorneys recommend reviewing your plan every two to three years or after any major tax law change.