ESTATE PLANNING NEAR ME — ARKANSAS
Estate Planning in Arkansas — Tax-Smart Wealth Protection
MERNA™-certified estate planning strategists serving Arkansas. Protect your wealth with trusts, business succession planning, and tax-efficient transfers.
Free Arkansas Estate Planning Analysis
45 minutes. No obligation. We’ll show you exactly how the 2026 exemption sunset impacts your Arkansas estate.
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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Estate Planning in Arkansas — FAQs
Does Arkansas have a state estate tax?+
No — Arkansas does not have a state estate tax or inheritance tax. However, Arkansas residents still face the federal estate tax at 40% on estates exceeding approximately $7M after the 2026 exemption sunset. Many Arkansas families incorrectly assume they’re safe because there’s no state tax, but the federal exposure alone can cost hundreds of thousands.
How much does estate planning cost in Arkansas?+
Arkansas estate planning costs range from $2,000–$25,000+ depending on complexity. A basic revocable living trust package runs $3,500–$7,000. Complex planning with irrevocable trusts, FLPs, and business succession for high-net-worth families typically costs $10,000–$25,000. The ROI is substantial — a $15,000 estate plan that saves $1.5M in federal estate taxes delivers a 100:1 return.
What type of trust is best for Arkansas residents?+
For most Arkansas residents, a revocable living trust is the foundation — it avoids probate, maintains privacy, and provides incapacity protection. For estates over $7M, add irrevocable trusts (SLATs, ILITs, dynasty trusts) to remove assets from your taxable estate. For business owners, a combination of buy-sell agreements, FLPs, and GRATs freezes business value.
How does the 2026 estate tax exemption sunset affect Arkansas families?+
The federal estate tax exemption drops from $13.61M to approximately $7M per individual on January 1, 2026. For Arkansas families, this means a married couple with a $15M estate currently owes $0 in estate tax, but after 2026 could owe $400,000+. A single individual with a $10M estate goes from $0 to potentially $1.2M in estate tax. The window to implement gifting strategies, GRATs, and irrevocable trusts is closing.
What is a SLAT and should Arkansas residents consider one?+
A Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT) allows one spouse to gift assets into an irrevocable trust for the benefit of the other spouse, removing those assets from both estates while maintaining indirect access. For Arkansas married couples with estates between $7M–$25M, a SLAT is one of the most powerful tools available before the 2026 sunset. It uses your current high exemption before it drops.
How do I protect my Arkansas business from estate taxes?+
Arkansas business owners should implement: (1) A buy-sell agreement funded by life insurance to provide liquidity. (2) A Family Limited Partnership (FLP) to transfer business interests at discounted values. (3) A GRAT to freeze business value and transfer future appreciation tax-free. (4) Proper succession planning documentation. Without these, heirs may be forced to sell the business to pay estate taxes.
What happens if I die without an estate plan in Arkansas?+
Without an estate plan, Arkansas intestacy laws determine who inherits your assets — which may not align with your wishes. Your estate will go through probate (public, expensive, and slow). The court will appoint a guardian for minor children. Your family will have no tax planning in place, potentially paying hundreds of thousands in avoidable estate taxes. Business assets may need to be liquidated.
What is step-up in basis and how does it help Arkansas families?+
Step-up in basis means that when you die, your heirs receive your assets at their current fair market value — not your original purchase price. For Arkansas families with appreciated real estate or investments, this eliminates capital gains tax on decades of appreciation. A home bought for $200K now worth $1.5M? Your heirs inherit at $1.5M basis — zero capital gains tax if they sell. This is a massive benefit that proper estate planning preserves.
Should I move assets out of my name before 2026?+
If your estate exceeds $7M, yes — the window to use your current high exemption ($13.61M) closes on January 1, 2026. Strategies include: gifting to irrevocable trusts (SLATs, dynasty trusts), creating GRATs to freeze asset values, funding ILITs with life insurance, and establishing FLPs for business interests. Once the exemption drops, these opportunities are gone permanently. Arkansas residents should act now.
How do I find a qualified estate planning professional in Arkansas?+
Look for professionals with: (1) MERNA™ certification — indicating advanced tax strategy training. (2) Experience with estates in the $5M–$50M+ range. (3) Knowledge of both federal AND Arkansas state tax laws. (4) A team approach (CPA + attorney + financial advisor). Uncle Kam’s marketplace connects you with vetted, MERNA™-certified strategists who specialize in Arkansas estate planning.
Protect Your Arkansas Legacy — Before 2026
The estate tax exemption sunset is coming. Don’t let your family pay 40% to the IRS.