Estate Tax Planning in Thousand Oaks

Estate Tax Planning in Thousand Oaks

California has no estate tax. That is the good news. The federal estate tax is real, but as of 2026 it applies to far fewer families than people assume. The federal exemption is now $15,000,000 per person and $30,000,000 per married couple, permanent under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Most Thousand Oaks households are not exposed. The families who are: business owners whose company keeps appreciating in value, single decedents who only get one exemption instead of two, couples where one spouse is not a U.S. citizen and cannot use the unlimited marital deduction, and anyone holding real property outside California in a state that still taxes estates.

I am an estate planning attorney serving Thousand Oaks and all of Ventura County. I do this work over Zoom or by phone and sign documents in person. I will tell you whether you actually have a federal estate tax problem right now, and whether your situation is one of the ones that still needs planning around it. I will not run up a planning bill on a problem that does not exist for you. For the full picture, start with estate planning in Thousand Oaks.

Who actually has an exposure problem today

The federal exemption is $15,000,000 per person as of 2026, permanent under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which means a married couple can pass $30,000,000 before federal estate tax applies. At that level, very few Thousand Oaks families have a current tax problem. Where it gets more complicated: Amgen executives with significant equity compensation and vested stock, business owners with a company worth several million that keeps appreciating, and families who have been accumulating real estate for decades. Add a $1 million home, a $2 million retirement account, a $500,000 business interest, and $2 million in life insurance, and you are at $5.5 million, comfortably under the threshold for a married couple. A single person with those same assets plus a growing business, or a family with property outside California in a state that still taxes estates, gets there faster.

The tools that actually work

Irrevocable trusts remove assets from your taxable estate while allowing them to benefit your family. A spousal lifetime access trust lets your spouse benefit from assets while removing them from both of your estates over time. A grantor retained annuity trust works well when you have an asset expected to appreciate significantly. Annual gifting programs let you move money out of your estate over time without gift tax if you stay within annual exclusion limits. These strategies are not secret or aggressive. They are the standard toolkit, and the earlier you start, the more flexibility you have.

When to plan even if you are not there yet

The best time to implement estate tax strategies is when you do not need them urgently, because that is when you have the most options. Irrevocable trusts are funded when asset values are low or when you have the cash flow to make the transfers. GRATs are locked in at interest rates that change monthly. If you wait until you are clearly over the threshold, you may have missed the most efficient window. For Conejo Valley executives and professionals, high-net-worth estate planning and asset protection fold naturally into this conversation.

Questions Thousand Oaks clients ask

Does California tax estates? No. California eliminated its estate tax years ago. Only the federal tax applies, and only above the federal exemption amount, which is $15,000,000 per person as of 2026 and permanent under current law.

The exemption is now permanent. Does earlier planning still make sense? Yes. Irrevocable trusts funded under prior law are not undone by the exemption becoming permanent. If your estate is comfortably under $15,000,000 per person, some of those structures may no longer be necessary, and it is worth a review to see what still fits. But asset protection, income tax efficiency, and control over how assets pass to the next generation are reasons those structures still make sense even without an exemption problem.

Is life insurance counted in my estate? Yes, if you own the policy. A properly structured irrevocable life insurance trust removes the death benefit from your taxable estate entirely. Many people do not realize their policy is adding to their estate tax exposure.

Talk to Eric or call 805-244-5291. I serve Thousand Oaks and all of Ventura County.

For families transferring a home between generations, the Proposition 19 reassessment calculator can estimate the property-tax impact of a parent-child or grandparent-grandchild transfer.

Want a straight read on where you stand?

Talk to Eric. A free 30-minute call, no pitch. He’ll tell you where you’re exposed, what it would cost to fix, and what you can skip.

Talk to Eric