Levy Salis LLP is thrilled to share a special interview that Shlomi Steve Levy gave for Globe & Mail, which was published on January 6, 2021. In this article, he advises on how U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s tax proposals could affect Americans living in Canada. He provides insights on proposed changes to U.S. income tax, U.S. Estate Tax and U.S. Gift Tax and their potential impact.
To know more about these proposed changes to U.S. taxes, read the article below or click here to read the article on the Globe & Mail’s website.
How Biden’s tax proposals could affect U.S. persons in Canada
BRENDA BOUW
THE GLOBE AND MAIL
January 6th, 2021
Financial advisors with clients who are U.S. persons living in Canada need to prepare them for potential tax changes under president-elect Joe Biden’s administration, which is set to take over the White House later this month.
While the likelihood of a divided Congress is expected to dampen or even diffuse some of the tax hikes proposed in the Democrat’s campaign platform, it’s a good time for American ex-pats, particularly the wealthy, to think about their holdings and restructure them as needed.
“For advisors, it’s not about predicting the future, it’s more about sitting down with a client and saying, ‘Here are some probable things that could happen,’ and figuring out how we should be thinking about them and positioning the client for the future,” says Darren Coleman, senior vice-president, private client group, and portfolio manager at Coleman Wealth, a division of Raymond James Ltd. in Toronto. “The client looks to the advisor to make sure they aren’t getting blindsided.”
Two of the main tax proposals that could affect American ex-pats deal with personal income taxes for wealthy people and the U.S. estate tax, also known as the “death tax.”
Mr. Biden campaigned on a promise to increase the top income tax rate to 39.6 per cent from 37 per cent for U.S. persons with personal worldwide income of more than US$400,000, as well as to restore the U.S. estate tax exemption from a high of US$11.58-million, which is set to expire at the end of 2025, to US$3.5-million, where it was in 2009.
The Democrats also proposed to decouple the lifetime gift-tax exemption from the U.S. estate tax and set the exemption at US$1-million, says Shlomi Steve Levy, a lawyer with cross-border tax and estate-planning firm Levy Salis LLP in Montreal.
“That’s a huge downturn in the ability for Americans to do things” in their estate planning, Mr. Levy says.
There is also a proposal to increase the top tax rate on capital gains and dividends to 39.6 per cent from 23.8 per cent for U.S. persons with a worldwide income of US$1-million or more.
Mr. Levy notes that Mr. Biden’s tax policy also states that inheriting property subject to U.S. tax will not be at the fair market value of the property upon death. “Instead, the inheritance will be received at the decedent’s cost basis, or the purchase price,” he says.
While Mr. Levy says he believes Mr. Biden’s proposals will be challenging to pass, he’s discussing the proposals with clients to make sure they understand their options should a change were to happen.
The higher personal income tax rate “could create some challenges” for wealthier U.S. persons in Canada, but it should not be as significant a change as taxes are generally higher in Canada, says Terry Ritchie, vice-president and partner in the Calgary office of Cardinal Point Capital Management Inc.
That’s because there’s a longstanding tax treaty between the U.S. and Canada that ensures taxpayers aren’t taxed twice on the same income. However, the bigger issue is with potential changes to estate and gift taxes, Mr. Ritchie says.
“That would affect a lot of people [and] would mean a reset of estate planning,” he says.
It would also affect Canadians who own property in the U.S. or who hold U.S. stocks in accounts in Canada. Potential changes to those rules would likely expose them to U.S. non-resident estate taxes and a U.S. tax-filing requirement upon death, he says.
“Right now, we are telling clients it’s business as usual,” Mr. Ritchie says, in part because the proposals appear unlikely to pass if Republicans continue to hold the Senate majority.
Still, he says clients with assets of more than US$11.58-million might want to consider selling or gifting those assets in the near term to avoid a huge tax bill upon death, especially as the exemption is only temporary.
“It could be your last chance to remove that U.S. estate tax exposure,” Mr. Ritchie says.
Elena Hanson, managing director and founder of Hanson Crossborder Tax Inc. in Oakville, Ont., is telling her wealthier U.S. person clients in Canada to prepare for the US$11.58-million exemption to be curtailed sooner rather than later.
“What we are emphasizing to clients is to start thinking about their estate planning and [asset] structures,” she says.
Ms. Hanson also notes that wealthy Canadians with assets in the U.S. (known as “U.S. situs assets”) will face U.S. estate taxes if those assets exceed US$60,000 and their worldwide estate exceeds the current US$11.58-million exemption.
The U.S. situs assets don’t have to be in the U.S. “They can be even in Canada with a portfolio manager or held in a [registered retirement savings plan] or [tax-free savings account],” she says.
Canadians who may be potentially affected might wish to consider trimming their U.S. assets by replacing them with Canadian mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that have underlying U.S. assets. “[But] U.S. persons are not advised to buy Canadian mutual funds and ETFs as it gives them a negative tax implication,” Ms. Hanson says.
President-elect Biden has also proposed tax hikes on businesses, including increasing the corporate income tax rate to 28 per cent from 21 per cent, which is still lower than the 35 per cent rate that was in effect prior to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), which went into effect in 2018.
Another proposal is to double the tax rate on global intangible low-taxed income (GILTI) – also enacted as part of TCJA – on U.S. corporations with foreign subsidiaries to 21 per cent from 10.5 per cent and to compute the GILTI tax (and related foreign tax credits) on a country-by-country basis instead of on a worldwide average.
Ms. Hanson says those proposals may not pass, but believes advisors should be flagging them to U.S. persons who are business owners in Canada, just in case.
Mr. Coleman says many U.S. persons in Canada are unaware of their existing tax-filing obligations, several of which aren’t expected to change under the Biden administration.
Examples include taxing U.S. persons on their worldwide income, regardless of where they live, obligations to file annual U.S. tax returns as well as reporting Canadian and other non-U.S. bank and investment accounts, foreign assets and foreign gifts and inheritances above US$100,000. The sale of a home in Canada could also be subject to taxes in the U.S., Mr. Coleman says.
“Know that you have all of these issues to deal with; they haven’t gone away,” Mr. Coleman says.
Instead, he says U.S. persons in Canada will just have more to think about when President Biden starts making decisions in a few weeks.
The comments offered in this article are meant to be general in nature and are not intended to provide legal advice regarding any individual situation. Before taking any action involving your individual situation, you should seek legal advice to ensure it is appropriate for your circumstances.
About the author
Shlomi Steve Levy is a Partner of Levy Salis LLP and is a member of the Quebec Bar, the Law Society of Ontario (L3), the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners, and the Canadian Bar Association.