Elaine Edwards, CFP®
Financial Planning Strategies
FORTE ADVISORS

9100 S DADELAND BLVD, STE 1500
MIAMI, FL 33156
(305) 235-8115
elaine@iamforte.com
iamforte.com

An Overview of Asset Transfer Strategies

By Elaine Floyd, CFP ®

You may need to transfer assets for all sorts of reasons. A working knowledge of various transfer techniques can help you determine when it’s appropriate to move money around, and how to minimize the tax and legal implications of the process.

Reviewing documents

Asset transfers are an important part of financial planning. As you move through life, you are constantly acquiring and disposing of assets until that final transfer takes place—the one you’re not around to see.

Some asset transfers are initiated as a result of a life event or other major decision. Others are suggested by attorneys or financial advisors as a way to better arrange your affairs. Some asset transfers are as easy as handing a tangible item over to another individual. Others are fraught with legalities and should not be attempted without counsel.

Here is an overview of asset transfers—the tip of the iceberg, if you will. Many of the regulations governing asset transfers are state laws, so your best bet is to check with your financial advisor and a good attorney—several of them, actually, in different specialties—who can guide you through the transfer process.

Why assets move

There are lots of reasons why people transfer assets. Here are some of them.

Tax and legal considerations

It would seem that if an individual wants to get rid of an asset or if two individuals want to enter into a private transaction, they ought to be able to do it without tripping over a bunch of laws. For smaller transactions, they can. For instance, gift giving at birthdays and holidays would normally be exempt from asset-transfer laws.

In some transfer situations, however, there’s opportunity for tax evasion, taking advantage of people, or exploiting laws that are designed to help the needy. In those cases, certain procedures must be followed. And to make sure they are, the transfer process itself—the physical transfer of title to another person—may be extremely complex and not possible to complete without the help of an attorney, escrow officer, transfer agent, or other intermediary.

Even so, the intermediary arranging for the transfer may not be obligated to warn clients of the various tax and legal ramifications—in some cases he or she may simply be following instructions to transfer title—so it is up to you to know the law—or obtain legal counsel.

Here are a few of the common considerations involved in asset transfers:

Gift tax

If you are thinking about transferring assets to family members to save income or estate taxes or to facilitate transfer later on, then you should be aware of gift tax rules. In 2025, any gift to an individual that exceeds $19,000 for the year ($38,000 for joint gifts by married couples) applies against the lifetime gift tax exclusion and requires the filing of Form 709 for the year in which the gift was made. The gift tax does not need to be paid at the time Form 709 is filed, unless the client has exceeded the lifetime gift tax exclusion of $13.99 million in 2025 (adjusted annually for inflation through 2025).

Transfers to spouses who are U.S. citizens and to charitable organizations are exempt from gift tax. Payments made directly to an educational or health care institution are also exempt from gift tax. Property exchanged for equivalent value (as in a sale to another party) is not subject to gift tax. However, low-interest loans to family members may be subject to gift tax. Complicated transactions like these require the advice of an attorney or tax advisor.

Kiddie tax

The practice of transferring assets to children to avoid income tax on investment earnings is less popular since taxation grew more stringent, but it is still valid. Investment income earned by qualified children is taxed at the same rate as trusts and estates. This will continue through 2025. It’s certainly possible to get around the kiddie tax by investing in assets that don’t pay current income—but then, what’s the point of transferring assets to children, especially when parents must think about funding college?

Financial aid

The formula that determines need-based aid factors is a much higher percentage of assets when they belong to children (20%) as opposed to parents (5.64%). So the classic financial aid strategy is to keep assets away from children and stash parents’ assets in retirement plans, home equity, and other exempt assets.

What if a child already has significant assets—say, in an UGMA or UTMA account? Is there any way to get them out of the child’s name? Probably not (check with an attorney to be sure), at least not until the child turns 18 or 21 and has the legal authority to transfer property. But by then it may be too late for financial aid, since schools look at the family’s financial picture as early as the student’s junior year of high school. Any parent who wants to maintain maximum financial aid flexibility (and this includes need-based scholarships, not just loans) should think twice before transferring assets to children.

Medicaid

Medicaid is designed for people with few assets who can’t afford to pay for custodial care. In the past, people had to “spend down” to such small amounts that often the healthy spouse was left nearly destitute. This led to rampant asset transfers and big business in “Medicaid planning.”

However, the laws have been liberalized to better protect the healthy spouse, so asset-transfer gimmicks have waned somewhat. In any case, clients contemplating asset transfers in anticipation of applying for Medicaid need to be aware of “look back” laws—60 months for transfers to individuals (with some exceptions if the transfer is to a child under 21 or a child of any age who is blind or disabled) and trusts.

Bankruptcy

Each state has its own laws relating to how much property a client can keep and still discharge debts in bankruptcy. These laws also address property transfers in which it appears that the debtor is trying to pull a fast one.

Popular asset-transfer strategies

The main point to understand is that asset transfers may not be as straightforward as you think, and some transfers may have unintended consequences. At the same time, strategies you may not have considered could provide the perfect financial planning tools. Popular alternatives include:


As director of retirement and life planning for Horsesmouth, Elaine Floyd helps advisors better serve their clients by understanding the practical and technical aspects of retirement income planning. A former wirehouse broker, she earned her CFP designation in 1986.