| Your executor is required to file a "terminal tax return" that declares
all of the income you earned in the year up to your death. Any investments
not left to your spouse or common-law spouse are treated as if they had
been sold the day of your death. In both of these scenarios, capital gains
can be onerous.
When planning your estate, discuss the following issues surrounding taxes:
- How naming your spouse or common-law
spouse as the beneficiary on your RRSP or RRIF can lead to a preferable
tax situation?
- Who you should bequeath
assets with capital gains to, and who should receive assets without
capital gains?
- How authorizing your
executor to make one final investment into your spousal RRSP can
benefit your estate?
- How charitable donations of cash or
other assets can lessen your final payable taxes?
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