1. The Unlimited Marital Deduction and Portability of the Estate Tax Exemption
The unlimited marital deduction under Internal Revenue Code Section 2056 allows one spouse to transfer an unlimited amount of assets to the other spouse during life or at death without incurring any federal gift or estate tax, effectively deferring the transfer tax until the surviving spouse's subsequent death, and understanding both the conditions under which the unlimited marital deduction is available and the strategic limitations of relying exclusively on the marital deduction is essential for developing an effective spousal inheritance planning strategy. The two most important limitations of the marital deduction are that it is unavailable for transfers to a non-citizen surviving spouse without a qualified domestic trust and that relying solely on the deduction to defer tax can significantly increase the estate tax burden on the surviving spouse's estate.
How Does Irc Section 2056 Define the Unlimited Marital Deduction and What Assets Qualify?
IRC Section 2056 permits a decedent's estate to deduct from the gross estate the value of all property passing to the surviving spouse in a qualifying manner, including outright bequests, qualified terminable interest property placed in a QTIP trust, and life insurance proceeds, and the marital deduction is available only for transfers to a U.S. .itizen surviving spouse with transfers to a non-citizen surviving spouse qualifying only if the assets are held in a qualified domestic trust under IRC Section 2056A. Resources on estate planning and estate tax explain how the marital deduction applies to different asset types and how the QDOT election is structured to preserve the deduction for non-citizen surviving spouses in a comprehensive spousal inheritance planning strategy.
What Is Portability and How Does It Allow a Surviving Spouse to Use a Deceased Spouse's Unused Exemption?
Portability, codified at IRC Section 2010(c), allows a surviving spouse to use the deceased spouse's unused exemption amount, the DSUEA, in addition to their own exemption when computing estate tax at death, and to preserve portability the executor must file a federal estate tax return on a timely basis even if no estate tax is owed, because the DSUEA is permanently lost if the portability election is not timely made. Resources on estate tax planning and trusts and estates explain how portability interacts with the current exemption sunset scheduled for 2026 and what planning strategies couples should implement before the scheduled reduction in the exemption amount takes effect.
2. The Qtip Trust, Bypass Trust, and Other Spousal Inheritance Planning Trust Structures
The two most widely used trust structures in spousal inheritance planning are the QTIP trust and the credit shelter or bypass trust, and they serve different but complementary purposes, with the QTIP trust designed to qualify assets for the marital deduction while preserving the first spouse's ability to control the ultimate disposition of the assets after the surviving spouse's death, and the bypass trust designed to use the first spouse's estate tax exemption at death rather than deferring all tax to the surviving spouse's estate. The choice between these trust structures, or the combination of both, depends on the couple's total estate size, the composition of their assets, their concern about the surviving spouse's possible remarriage or creditor claims, and the tax environment at the time of planning.
What Is a Qtip Trust and How Does It Preserve Both the Marital Deduction and Testamentary Control?
A qualified terminable interest property trust qualifies for the unlimited marital deduction under IRC Section 2056(b)(7) by requiring that all trust income be paid at least annually to the surviving spouse, that no person other than the surviving spouse has the power to appoint any part of the trust property to any person other than the surviving spouse, and that the executor makes the QTIP election on the estate tax return. Resources on trusts and estates and trust law explain how QTIP trusts are drafted, how the income interest is defined, and how the remainder interest is directed to the intended beneficiaries while preserving the first spouse's testamentary control in a spousal inheritance planning context.
How Does a Bypass Trust Differ from a Qtip Trust and When Is It the Preferred Spousal Inheritance Planning Strategy?
A bypass trust, also called a credit shelter trust, is funded with an amount equal to the first spouse's available estate tax exemption at death and holds assets that will not be included in the surviving spouse's gross estate, thereby sheltering those assets from estate tax at the surviving spouse's death regardless of how much they appreciate in value, and the bypass trust typically provides the surviving spouse with income for life, discretionary principal distributions for health, education, maintenance, and support, and potentially a limited power of appointment. Resources on irrevocable trust planning and estate planning explain how bypass trusts are sized in the current elevated exemption environment and how the bypass trust interacts with portability to provide maximum tax protection across both spouses' estates in a spousal inheritance planning strategy.
3. Elective Share Rights, Community Property, and the Step-Up in Basis
The rights of a surviving spouse under state law to claim a share of the decedent's estate regardless of the terms of the will, and the property ownership rules that determine which assets each spouse owns, are the two most important state law dimensions of spousal inheritance planning, and they interact in complex ways with the federal tax rules governing the marital deduction, portability, and the step-up in basis available to the surviving spouse for inherited assets. Both the elective share and the community property rules can either enhance or significantly complicate an otherwise well-structured spousal inheritance plan if they are not carefully integrated into the planning strategy.
What Is the Elective Share and How Does It Protect a Surviving Spouse from Disinheritance?
The elective share is a statutory right available to a surviving spouse under the law of most common law property states that allows the surviving spouse to claim a specified percentage of the decedent's augmented estate, typically defined under the Uniform Probate Code as one-third to one-half of the augmented estate depending on the length of the marriage, regardless of what the decedent's will provides, and the augmented estate concept includes not only the decedent's probate estate but also certain non-probate transfers such as revocable trusts and life insurance proceeds. Resources on estate planning and estate disputes explain how elective share calculations are made, what assets are included in the augmented estate, and what procedural steps the surviving spouse must take to assert the elective share right within the applicable statutory time limit.
How Does Community Property Law Affect Spousal Inheritance Planning and the Step-Up in Basis?
In the nine community property states, all property acquired during the marriage is owned equally by both spouses, and under IRC Section 1014(b)(6) the surviving spouse receives a step-up in basis to fair market value on both halves of the community property, a double step-up in basis that can eliminate substantial capital gains on appreciated community property assets, while in common law property states only the decedent's assets receive the step-up in basis and the surviving spouse's assets retain their original cost basis. Resources on estate tax planning and estate planning explain how community property rules affect estate tax planning and what strategies are available for couples who move between community and common law states during their marriage.
4. Life Insurance, the Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust, and Law Firm Services in Spousal Inheritance Planning
Life insurance plays a dual role in spousal inheritance planning as both a source of liquidity for paying estate taxes and providing income replacement for the surviving spouse, and as a potential estate tax problem if the death benefit is included in the decedent's gross estate under IRC Section 2042 because the insured possessed incidents of ownership over the policy, and the irrevocable life insurance trust, commonly called an ILIT, is the planning vehicle used to ensure that life insurance proceeds are received free of federal estate tax. The intersection of life insurance planning with the broader spousal inheritance plan requires careful coordination among the policy ownership and beneficiary designations, the trust structure, and the estate tax calculations to ensure that the death benefit serves its intended purpose.
How Does an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust Remove Life Insurance from the Taxable Estate While Providing Funds for Spousal Support?
An irrevocable life insurance trust acquires or receives ownership of a life insurance policy on the grantor's life, thereby removing the death benefit from the grantor's gross estate, and the ILIT can be structured to provide the surviving spouse with income or principal distributions for health, education, maintenance, and support while simultaneously directing the trust assets to the next generation at the surviving spouse's death, funded using the grantor's annual gift tax exclusion of $18,000 per beneficiary in 2025 combined with Crummey powers that give beneficiaries the right to withdraw their allocable share of each contribution for a specified period. Resources on irrevocable trust planning and trusts and estates explain how ILITs are structured, how the Crummey power works, and how the ILIT fits into a comprehensive spousal inheritance planning strategy that integrates the trust with the broader estate plan.
What Comprehensive Legal Services Does a Law Firm Provide for Spousal Inheritance Planning?
A law firm with estate planning expertise provides a full-spectrum spousal inheritance planning service that begins with a comprehensive assessment of the couple's assets, ownership structure, beneficiary designations, and existing estate planning documents, followed by the design and drafting of a coordinated set of documents including wills with trust funding provisions, QTIP and bypass trusts, ILIT agreements with Crummey power provisions, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives. Resources on probate administration and will drafting explain how experienced spousal inheritance planning counsel structures the documentation and administration process, including the portability election, elective share assessment, and coordination with financial advisors and accountants, to ensure that the plan operates as intended from the first spouse's death through the surviving spouse's ultimate estate distribution.
01 Apr, 2026

