District of Columbia


DC Estate Planning Considerations


Common-Law State

DC is a Common Law jurisdiction, which means the rules governing the ownership, division, and inheritance of income and property acquired by a husband or wife during their marriage hold that subject to various qualifications, each spouse owns and has complete control of her income and property.


Last Will and Testament


Will Creation

The minimum age of a person competent to make a will is 18.

The number of witnesses necessary to execute a will is two.

Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA)

The custodial arrangement terminates when:

 The minor child reaches age 18 for custodial transfers made by irrevocable lifetime gift, will, trust, or exercise of a power of appointment (although the person transferring the property may extend this age to 21).

 The minor child reaches age 18 concerning other custodial transfers.

 The minor child dies.

Dying without a Will, the DC Laws of Intestacy

The estate goes to the surviving spouse or domestic partner (DP), as follows:

 If there are no surviving descendants or parents, —100% of the estate

 If surviving descendants are also descendants of the spouse or DP and there is no other surviving descendant of either—two‐thirds of the estate

 If the parent(s) survive, but there are no surviving descendants, —75% of the remaining estate

 If the spouse or DP has descendent(s) other than those also related to the decedent, —50% of the balance of the estate

 If there are surviving descendants, at least one of whom is not a descendant of the surviving spouse or DP—50% of the balance of the estate

If there is no surviving spouse or DP, or if a portion of the estate does not go to the spouse or DP:

 100% (or applicable portion) of the estate goes to children equally, with children of deceased children taking the deceased parent’s share. Every other descendant alive at the decedent’s death stands in the deceased ancestor’s place, with those of equal degree taking equal shares. “Standing in the place of” is not defined in the statute, but usage suggests per stirpes. See DC Code §19‐307 and §19‐310.

If there is no surviving spouse/DP, child, or descendant:

 100% to surviving parent or parents equally

If there is no surviving spouse/DP, child, descendant, or parent:

 100% to siblings or their descendants, equally, with descendants standing in deceased parents’ place. “Standing in the place of” is not defined in the statute, but usage suggests per stirpes. See DC Code §19‐307 and §19‐310.

If none of the above:

 Intestacy laws outline further distribution steps to the level of “collaterals,” then grandparents and related individuals. See DC Code §19‐311 and §19‐312.

 If no legally described recipient can be found, estate assets go to the District of Columbia.

Digital Assets

The District of Columbia does not automatically grant access to digital assets to executors or personal representatives of estates. The District has introduced, but not yet passed, the Revised Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act.


Taxes


Inheritance Tax

The District of Columbia does not impose an inheritance tax.

Credit Estate Tax

The District of Columbia’s estate tax exemption is $5,762,400 (2020), and the top tax rate is 16%.

Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax (GST Tax)

The District of Columbia does not impose a GST tax.

Gift Tax

The District of Columbia does not impose a gift tax.

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