LexSteward
Estate & Gift

See how much of your legacy reaches the people you love — before the tax code takes its cut.

Estate and gift planning is about clarity, not fear. We help you understand where your estate stands against current federal thresholds and how lifetime gifting shapes what passes to the next generation. The earlier you map it, the more options you keep.

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Who it’s for

Families, business owners, and individuals with appreciating assets who want to pass wealth on with intention rather than chance.

Why it works

People act when they can see the gap between what they have and what their heirs would actually receive — a clear picture turns a vague worry into a concrete plan.

The estate & gift toolkit

2 calculators, one practice area.

Each runs in the visitor’s browser, shows a real answer instantly, then routes a lead to the firm. No sign-up, nothing stored.

Federal Estate-Tax Exposure Estimator

estate

Estimates your potential federal estate-tax exposure by comparing your projected taxable estate to the applicable exemption, as published in the IRS estate-tax rules.

What you enter
A rough inventory of assets (real estate, accounts, business interests, life insurance) and major liabilities.
What you get
An illustrative view of whether your estate may approach or exceed the federal threshold, so you know whether deeper planning is warranted.

Annual / Lifetime Gift-Tax Estimator

estate

Shows how annual exclusion gifts and lifetime transfers interact, drawing on the federal gift-tax framework administered by the IRS.

What you enter
The amounts and recipients of gifts you’ve made or plan to make this year, plus any prior reported lifetime gifts.
What you get
A qualitative sense of which gifts stay within the annual exclusion and how the rest may draw down your lifetime amount.
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See your estimate for yourself.

This is the real tool your visitors would use, recolored to your firm.

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Estimated federal estate-tax exposure
Likely no federal estate tax
Simplified at the top 40% rate (the real schedule is graduated). The 2026 exemption is $15,000,000 per person.
Taxable estate$0
Exemption available$15,000,000
Amount over exemption$0
Estimated estate tax$0
Illustrative federal estimate using the 2026 $15M exemption. Ignores portability of a deceased spouse's exemption, state estate/inheritance taxes, and the graduated rate schedule. Not legal or tax advice. This is an illustrative estimate for general informational purposes only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice, it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and it is not a quote, promise, prediction, or guarantee of any benefit, amount, eligibility, deadline, or outcome. Figures are based on published government sources as of the date shown and change over time; results may not reflect current law or the facts of your situation. Do not rely on this tool — consult a licensed attorney before taking or refraining from any action.
How it works

From curious to qualified, in three steps.

01

Estimate

Add up your assets and liabilities to get a working picture of your taxable estate.

02

Compare

Measure that estate against the federal exemption in effect for the year, per the IRS estate-tax rules.

03

Plan

Explore gifting, trusts, and timing strategies with counsel to narrow any exposure.

The key numbers

The verified figures behind the math.

Every calculator draws on published government sources, dated and monitored. These are the current ones for estate & gift.

$15,000,000
2026 federal estate & gift exemption (per individual)
As of 2026 · One Big Beautiful Bill Act (2025); IRS 2026 inflation adjustments — confirmed by Morgan Lewis summary
40%
Top estate-tax rate
As of 2026 · IRC §2001(c) — top marginal estate-tax rate
$19,000
2026 annual gift-tax exclusion (per donee)
As of 2026 · IRS 2026 inflation adjustments
Common questions

Estate & Gift — answered.

Will my family owe federal estate tax?

Most estates fall well under the federal exemption and owe nothing, but large or rapidly appreciating estates can approach the line. A clear estimate against the IRS estate-tax thresholds tells you whether to plan further.

What’s the difference between estate tax and inheritance tax?

The federal estate tax is assessed on the estate itself before assets are distributed; an inheritance tax, where a state imposes one, falls on the people who receive assets. There is no federal inheritance tax.

Do I have to file a gift-tax return for everyday gifts?

Gifts within the annual exclusion generally don’t require a return, while larger gifts are typically reported and applied against your lifetime amount under the IRS gift-tax rules. Reporting a gift is not the same as owing tax on it.

Does my spouse change the math?

Transfers between U.S.-citizen spouses are generally unlimited, and a surviving spouse may be able to use a deceased spouse’s unused exemption. These provisions can meaningfully shift your planning, so they’re worth reviewing with counsel.

Why plan now if the exemption is high today?

Exemption levels are set by law and can change as legislation sunsets or is revised. Planning while thresholds are favorable preserves choices you might not have later.

Why it’s built this way

Numbers you can stand behind.

Official sources only

Every figure traces to a federal or state primary source — VA, SSA, IRS, USCIS, the U.S. Trustee — with its effective date shown.

Attorney-reviewed

Tools are reviewed by a licensed attorney and ship as illustrative information, never as advice or a guarantee.

Always current

Monitored on each source’s own cadence — annual COLA, quarterly IRS interest, and so on — so a stale number can’t linger.

Zero retention

The math runs in the visitor’s browser. No claimant data is stored unless they choose to send it to the firm.

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This is an illustrative estimate for general informational purposes only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice, it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and it is not a quote, promise, prediction, or guarantee of any benefit, amount, eligibility, deadline, or outcome. Figures are based on published government sources as of the date shown and change over time; results may not reflect current law or the facts of your situation. Do not rely on this tool — consult a licensed attorney before taking or refraining from any action.