High Net Worth Estate Planning in New York

New York's unique dual estate tax environment demands sophisticated planning for high-net-worth families. Morgan Legal Group deploys the full range of advanced strategies to protect your wealth and transfer it to the next generation with minimal tax erosion.

Why New York High-Net-Worth Estate Planning Is Different

New York City is one of the most challenging estate tax jurisdictions in the United States. Not only does New York impose its own estate tax — with a lower exemption and a notorious "cliff" that can subject an entire estate to tax the moment it slightly exceeds the threshold — but the concentration of assets in real estate, financial securities, and closely held businesses means that many New York families face estate tax exposure that families of similar net worth in other states would never encounter. The federal estate tax exemption of $13.61 million per person (2024) provides broad protection at the federal level, but New York's $6.94 million state exemption affects a much larger portion of New York City's families.

Russel Morgan, Esq. has spent more than two decades developing expertise in the specific challenges that high-net-worth New York families face. His practice encompasses the full spectrum of advanced estate planning — from annual exclusion gifting programs that systematically reduce a taxable estate to sophisticated multi-trust structures involving IDGTs, SLATs, GRATs, dynasty trusts, and charitable vehicles that transfer wealth at minimal transfer tax cost. Each engagement begins with a thorough analysis of the family's complete asset picture, tax exposure at both the federal and New York levels, family dynamics, and long-term financial and estate goals.

With the federal estate tax exemption potentially scheduled to be cut in half after December 31, 2025, the urgency of acting on high-net-worth estate planning has never been greater. New York clients with estates between $7 million and $27 million are in a particularly critical window — exposed to New York estate tax now and potentially to federal estate tax after the sunset. Morgan Legal Group serves high-net-worth clients across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau, Westchester, and Suffolk counties.

High Net Worth Estate Planning Tools

High Net Worth Estate Planning — Your Questions Answered

At what wealth level does New York estate planning become complex?
The complexity threshold for New York estate planning is lower than most people expect, largely because New York imposes its own estate tax at a much lower level than the federal government. For 2024, New York's estate tax exemption is $6.94 million — and New York's notorious 'cliff' means that once an estate exceeds 105% of the exemption ($7.287 million in 2024), the entire estate is subject to New York estate tax at rates ranging from 3.06% to 16%. This means a New York estate worth $7.5 million faces a larger marginal tax burden than a federal estate worth $13 million. For New York City families, the accumulation of real estate alone can quickly push an estate into taxable territory. Practical complexity also increases with minor children requiring testamentary trusts, blended families, closely held business interests, significant retirement account balances, and special needs beneficiaries. At Morgan Legal Group, Russel Morgan advises clients with estates from $1 million to $100 million-plus, recognizing that every level of complexity deserves professional, tailored planning.
What is the New York estate tax cliff and how can it be avoided?
New York's estate tax 'cliff' is one of the most punishing provisions in any state tax code. Once a taxable estate exceeds 105% of the basic exclusion amount ($7.287 million for 2024), the exemption is completely eliminated — the entire estate is taxed from dollar one, not just the excess above the exemption. For estates just over the cliff, the effective marginal tax rate can exceed 100% on the dollars that push the estate over the threshold. Strategies to avoid the cliff include: deathbed charitable contributions that bring the estate below the cliff threshold; installment sales and gifts to irrevocable trusts during lifetime; properly structured marital deductions that defer New York estate tax; and annual gifting programs that systematically reduce the estate. Morgan Legal Group regularly helps New York families navigate the cliff through coordinated lifetime gifting, trust, and charitable planning strategies designed to keep the estate below the New York threshold across all five boroughs and surrounding counties.
What advanced estate planning tools are available to high-net-worth New York families?
High-net-worth New York families have access to a broad arsenal of advanced estate planning tools. The most commonly used strategies include: Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs), which remove life insurance death benefits from the taxable estate; Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts (SLATs), which use the gift tax exemption to remove assets from the estate while the beneficiary spouse retains access; Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRATs), which transfer above-hurdle appreciation to beneficiaries with minimal gift tax cost; Intentionally Defective Grantor Trusts (IDGTs) funded through installment sales; Qualified Personal Residence Trusts (QPRTs), particularly relevant for Manhattan homeowners; Dynasty Trusts for multi-generational wealth preservation; Charitable Lead Trusts and Charitable Remainder Trusts; and Family Limited Partnerships for transferring discounted business and investment interests. At Morgan Legal Group, Russel Morgan takes a holistic approach that treats tax minimization as one objective within the broader context of the client's legacy and family.
How does the potential 2025 exemption sunset affect New York estate planning today?
Under current federal law, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's temporarily doubled estate tax exemption — currently $13.61 million per person in 2024 — is scheduled to sunset on December 31, 2025, reverting to approximately $7 million per person (adjusted for inflation). For high-net-worth New York families, this creates both urgency and opportunity: individuals with estates between the post-sunset exemption and the current exemption have a window to transfer that additional amount to irrevocable trusts free of estate tax. The IRS confirmed in Treasury Regulation §20.2010-1(c) that gifts made using the higher exemption will not be clawed back. For New York clients, the analysis is more complex because New York does not allow portability, meaning both spouses' New York exemptions must be used during lifetime or at the first death. Morgan Legal Group is actively advising New York clients with estates above $7 million to implement gifting strategies before the potential sunset, using SLATs, IDGTs, and dynasty trusts to capture the full benefit of today's elevated exemption.

Related Estate Planning Topics

Additional resources: morganlegalny.com — Estate Planning Overview

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The window to capture today's elevated federal exemption may close after 2025. Russel Morgan, Esq. helps New York's wealthiest families plan with urgency and precision.

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