Family Business Advisory Services

October 11, 2021

Looming Estate Plan Disruptions

Are You Prepared?

"Have you not reserved even some type of blessing for me? Has my brother really taken everything?!" cried Esau. Isaac answered, "Behold, I made him a master over you, and I gave him all his brothers as servants, and I have sustained him with corn and wine; so for you then, what shall I do, my son?” – Genesis 27 : 36-37

Jacob may have caused the first recorded major disruption to a family’s long-term estate planning goals. While there is no familial deception or lentil soup traded for birthrights, numerous changes lurk in the current reconciliation bill snaking its way through Congress and it could have major ramifications to the plans you worked up just a few years ago.

We applaud family businesses and their advisors setting up estate plans with more guardrails than deathbed blessings, but would we be remiss if we failed to ask: Have you pulled out those documents recently?  

Below we briefly touch on planning vehicles and structures as well as valuation tools currently being debated in the reconciliation bill and why they are important to many family business owners and advisors.

Estate & Gift Tax Exemption

The current law provides an estate and gift tax exemption of $11.7 million per individual or $23.4 million for a married couple.  This provision is currently set to sunset December 31, 2025.  Previous guidance has stated any gifts made prior to any changes to the exemption will not be clawed back.

The current proposal rolls back the exemption amount to $6.02 million per individual adjusted for inflation or $12.04 million for a married couple, slashing the benefit effectively in half.  The effective date of change under the current proposed bill is January 1, 2022.

Individuals who anticipate their estate may exceed the lower threshold of $12.04 million should consider executing estate planning strategies to transfer that wealth before the end of the year, including gifting to descendants or a trust (more discussed below).  In less eloquent terms: Use It or Lose It!

Trust Changes

The “Bull Moose” would likely beam with pride regarding the current reconciliation bill’s “Trust busting” features.  In general, many of the law’s provisions are meant to curtail, if not outright eliminate, tools utilized by estate tax advisors and attorneys.  Many of the changes are expected to become effective either 1) at signage of the bill or 2) January 1, 2022.

The National Law Review provided a good summary regarding Grantor Trusts. In general, the current reconciliation bill largely eliminates many of the estate planning benefits of grantor trusts (trusts deemed to be owned by the creator of the trust or another person (each referred to as a “grantor”) for federal income tax purposes). The following rules would apply to trusts created on or after the date of enactment and to existing trusts to the extent transfers are made to such trusts on or after the date of enactment.

  • Estate Tax Inclusion - Assets owned by a grantor trust would be included in the grantor's estate and subject to estate tax upon the grantor's death.
  • Distributions as Gifts - Distributions from a grantor trust during the grantor's lifetime would generally be treated as taxable gifts.
  • Taxation Upon Termination of Grantor Trust Status - If the trust's grantor trust status is terminated (i.e., the trust becomes a separate taxpayer from the deemed owner), the grantor would be deemed to have made a taxable gift of the trust assets.
  • Gain Recognized Upon Transfers to Grantor Trust - Transfers between a grantor trust and its grantor would be subject to income tax regardless of when the grantor trust was created.
A key piece you and your planning team need to consider is, as it reads: The Legislation would apply to all post-enactment transfers between a grantor and grantor trust, including grantor trusts created prior to the date of enactment. Therefore, a sale or swap of assets after the Legislation’s effective date between a pre-enactment grantor trust and its grantor would be an income tax realization event.  Likewise, a GRAT annuity payment made in kind with appreciated assets to the grantor, after the Legislation’s effective date, would be an income tax realization event.  With respect to these grantor trust provisions, the House Bill includes a footnote which states, “A technical correction may be necessary to reflect this intent.” Grantor trusts are a big deal, but many other trust structures could fall under some of the same new, restrictive rules, including the following:
  • Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRATs)
  • Qualified Personal Residence Trusts (QPRTs)
  • Grantor Charitable Lead Annuity Trusts (CLATs)
  • Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts (SLATs)
  • Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs)
Gassman, Crotty, & Denicolo, P.A. had a great webinar recently to cover several possible changes to these vehicles. You can check it out here.

Valuation Discounts for Passive Assets

In a business valuation setting, valuation discounts for lack of control, lack of marketability, and lack of voting rights are allowed, but often require substantiation, quantification, and defense by a business appraiser communicated in a formal appraisal report.

As discussed in Mercer Capital’s Auto Dealer blog, the current version of the reconciliation bill proposes to eliminate valuation discounts for an entity’s “non-business”, or passive, assets including certain cash balances, marketable securities, equity in another entity, or real estate.  Actively utilized working capital or real estate for business operations would not be considered “passive.”  The effective date of enactment would be January 1, 2022.

We would argue discounts for lack of marketability and control represent quantifiable economic realities facing minority owners in nonmarketable passive entities. Regardless, the law’s impact would be large. Often, combined discounts for lack of control and marketability can range from 25-45%.

An option business owners should consider is triggering a valuation of minority ownership positions with a valuation date prior to the effective law date.  A 25%-45% increase in reportable gifts would only be compounded by the law’s lowering gift tax exemption (discussed previously).

Conclusion

We provide valuation services to families seeking to optimize their estate plans and we work with estate tax attorneys all across the country. Give one of our professionals a call to discuss how we can help you in the current environment.

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The Third Appraiser Isn’t There to Split the Difference
For many family businesses, valuation is treated as a one-time event rather than an ongoing tool. When viewed only at moments of necessity, valuation can create surprises, tension, and misalignment. Directors who treat valuation as a continuous process, however, use it to support better governance, promoting clear communication and more informed decision-making over time.
January 2026 | Making Buy-Sell Agreements Work: Valuation Mechanisms and Drafting Pitfalls
Value Matters® January 2026

Making Buy-Sell Agreements Work: Valuation Mechanisms and Drafting Pitfalls

Executive SummaryBuy-sell agreements are a cornerstone of planning for closely held businesses and family enterprises. Advisors spend significant time addressing ownership transitions, funding mechanisms, and tax considerations. Yet despite their importance, valuation provisions in buy-sell agreements are often treated as secondary drafting issues. Too often, they are boilerplate clauses that receive far less scrutiny than they deserve. When buy-sell agreements fail, valuation provisions are often the root cause.This article is the first in a two-part series examining how buy-sell agreements function in practice and why so many fall short of their intended purpose. Part I focuses on the valuation mechanisms commonly used in buy-sell agreements – fixed price, formula pricing, and appraisal-based processes – and explains the structural weaknesses that often undermine them. Drawing on our extensive valuation experience, we offer a practical framework for designing valuation provisions that are more likely to produce fair, predictable, and workable outcomes when a triggering event occurs.Part II will address what is required for buy-sell agreement pricing to be used to fix the value for gift and estate tax matters, including the requirements of Internal Revenue Code §2703 and guidance from key court cases such as Estate of Huffman and Connelly. Together, these articles are intended to help estate planners move beyond theoretical drafting and toward buy-sell agreements that withstand both real-world and IRS scrutiny.Common Buy-Sell Valuation MechanismsMost buy-sell agreements fall into one of four categories based on how price is determined:Fixed priceFormula pricingMultiple appraiser processSingle appraiser processEach approach has perceived advantages, but each also carries structural weaknesses that estate planners should carefully evaluate.Fixed-Price AgreementsFixed-price buy-sell agreements establish a specific dollar value for the business or ownership interests based on the owners’ agreement at a point in time. Their appeal lies in simplicity. The price is clear, easily understood, and inexpensive to administer. In theory, fixed-price agreements encourage owners to revisit and reaffirm value periodically.In practice, however, fixed prices are rarely updated with sufficient frequency. As the business evolves, the fixed price may become materially understated, overstated, or – by coincidence – approximately correct. The fundamental problem is not the use of a fixed price, but the absence of a reliable and consistently followed process for updating it. When the price becomes stale, incentives become misaligned. An unrealistically low price benefits the remaining owners, while an inflated price benefits the exiting owner. These distortions undermine fairness and often surface only after a triggering event, when renegotiation is least likely to succeed.Formula Price AgreementsFormula pricing agreements determine value by applying a predefined calculation, often based on financial statement metrics such as EBITDA multiples, book value, or shareholders’ equity. These agreements are frequently viewed as more objective than fixed prices and are attractive because they appear to adjust automatically as financial results change.The perceived precision of formulas is often illusory. Over time, changes in the business model, capital structure, accounting practices, or industry conditions can render a once-reasonable formula obsolete. Even when formulas are recalculated mechanically, they may fail to reflect economic reality (book value as a formula is a prime example of this). More importantly, most formula agreements lack guidance on when or how the formula itself should be revisited. Without periodic reassessment, formula pricing can embed significant inequities into the agreement while giving shareholders a false sense of certainty of fairness. Formula price agreements also fail to account for any non-operating assets that may have accumulated on the balance sheet. Valuation Process AgreementsValuation process agreements defer the determination of price until a triggering event occurs and rely on professional appraisers to establish value at that time. These agreements generally fall into two categories: multiple appraiser processes and single appraiser processes.Multiple Appraiser ProcessUnder a multiple appraiser process, each side appoints its own appraiser to value the business following a triggering event. If the resulting valuations differ beyond a specified threshold, the agreement typically calls for the appointment of a third appraiser to resolve the difference or render a binding conclusion.While this approach is intended to ensure fairness through balanced input, it often introduces uncertainty, delay, and cost. The final price, timing, and expense of the process are unknown at the outset. In addition, even well-intentioned appraisers may be perceived as advocates for the parties who selected them, complicating negotiations and eroding confidence in the outcome. For family-owned businesses in particular, the multiple appraiser process can unintentionally escalate conflict at a sensitive moment.Single Appraiser ProcessUnder a single appraiser process, one valuation firm is designated, either in advance or at the time of a triggering event, to perform a valuation. This approach is generally more efficient and cost-effective and avoids dueling opinions. When valuations are performed periodically, it can also make outcomes more predictable well before a triggering event occurs. Its effectiveness, however, depends entirely on careful advance planning and drafting.A More Effective Framework: “Single Appraiser: Select Now, Value Now and Annually (or Periodically) Thereafter”Given the shortcomings of traditional valuation mechanisms, is it possible to design a buy-sell valuation process that reliably produces reasonable outcomes? We believe it is.Based on extensive buy-sell agreement related valuation experience, we recommend a framework built on three principles: selecting the appraiser in advance, exercising the valuation process before a triggering event, and careful drafting of the valuation language in the agreement. 1. Retain an Appraiser NowEstate planners and other attorneys who draft buy-sell agreements should encourage clients to retain a qualified business appraiser at the outset, rather than waiting for a triggering event. Conducting an initial valuation transforms abstract agreement language into a concrete report that shareholders can review, understand, and question. This process reveals ambiguities in the agreement, clarifies expectations, and allows revisions to be made when no party knows whether they will ultimately be a buyer or a seller.This “Single Appraiser: Select Now, Value Now and Annually (or Periodically) Thereafter” approach offers several advantages:The valuation process is known and observed in advanceThe appraiser’s independence is established before any economic conflict arisesValuation methodologies and assumptions are understood by all partiesThe initial valuation becomes the operative price until updated or conditions changeAmbiguities in valuation language are identified and corrected earlyFuture valuations are more efficient, consistent, and less contentious2. Update the Valuation Annually or PeriodicallyStatic valuation mechanisms do not work in a dynamic business environment. Annual or periodic valuation updates help align expectations and reduce the likelihood of surprise or dissatisfaction when a triggering event occurs. In practice, disputes are more often driven by unmet expectations than by the absolute level of value. Regular valuations promote transparency and reduce friction.3. Draft Precise Valuation LanguageEven the best valuation process can fail if the agreement lacks clarity. Attorneys drafting buy-sell agreements should ensure that the agreements address, at a minimum:Standard of value (e.g., fair market value vs. fair value)Level of value (enterprise vs. interest level; treatment of discounts)Valuation date (“as of” date)Funding mechanismAppraiser qualifications (making certain to use business appraiser qualifications. For example, a “certified appraiser” refers to a real estate appraiser, rather than a business valuation expert.) Applicable appraisal standardsAmbiguity on any of these points materially increases the risk of divergent interpretations and unsuccessful outcomes.ConclusionBuy-sell agreements fail not because valuation is inherently subjective, but because valuation provisions are often left ambiguous, untested, or static. Estate planners and other attorneys who draft buy-sell agreements play a critical role in preventing these failures. By selecting appraisers in advance, exercising valuation processes periodically, and carefully drafting valuation language, advisors can dramatically improve the likelihood that a buy-sell agreement will function as intended.When valuation mechanisms are designed with the same rigor as tax and estate plans, buy-sell agreements can become durable planning tools capable of delivering predictability, fairness, and continuity when they are needed most. And the buy-sell agreement pricing may even be able to be used to fix the value for gift and estate tax filings. We will discuss this in Part II.For advisors who want to delve deeper into valuation concepts, planning strategies, and practical applications in estate and business succession planning, we recommend Buy-Sell Agreements: Valuation Handbook for Attorneys by Z. Christopher Mercer, FASA, CFA, ABAR (American Bar Association), written by our firm’s founder and Chairman. This book offers a thorough treatment of valuation issues and provides example language for consideration by attorneys when drafting buy-sell agreements that contain language important to the valuation process.
Being Ready for an Unsolicited Offer
Being Ready for an Unsolicited Offer
Preparedness is often mistaken for “getting ready to sell.” In reality, it is a governance discipline, one that gives families clarity about what the business means to them, how decisions will be made under pressure, and whether opportunities will be evaluated thoughtfully rather than reactively.

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