The artist forever to be remembered as Prince shocked the world with
his unexpected death last month at his Paisley Park compound outside
Minneapolis. As is often the case when legendary musicians pass away,
his album sales have soared. Fellow artists from Bruce Springsteen to
the cast of the Broadway smash Hamilton quickly honored the
seven-time Grammy award winner with their own versions of his iconic
hits. But it's just a matter of time before the gritty realities of
settling an estate intrude on the purple rain of praise . . . and that
includes the gritty reality of taxes.
Like many chart-toppers, Prince was a control freak when it came
to his sound and his career. Apparently, though, that planning didn't
extend to his finances — last week, his sister filed papers with a
Minnesota state court revealing he had left no will.
So who gets the assets, and just how much are we talking here?
Well, Prince had no wife when he died, and his parents had already
passed away. Under Minnesota law, that means his sister and five
half-siblings stand to inherit his fortune. Most reports estimate there
will be around $300 million to share . . . which should be enough to keep everyone rolling in little red corvettes for the rest of their lives.
Of course, that assumes that everything goes by the book. Already
there are reports of would-be love children slithering out of the
shadows, and Prince's half-brother Alfred has hired an attorney to
represent him after being barred from last week's memorial. That may
mean it's the accountants and attorneys who get to party like it's 1999.
Settling the estate without tearing it apart is just half the battle. That $300 million comes before
taxes. The IRS takes 40% of everything above $5.45 million. The Gopher
State takes another 16% of everything over $1.6 million. A little
fourth-grade arithmetic suggests the tax man can go crazy with $150
million or more.
We can probably expect a fight over the exact amount due. Estate
taxes are based on valuation, not income. So who's to say what Prince's
name and image are "worth"? What about a vault of 2,000 unrecorded
songs? What about the unpronounceable "love symbol" he adopted instead
of a name to spite his record label? How much would Pepsi pay to make a
commercial starring a holographic image?
That's all before the tax man takes a bite out of the millions
more in future royalties that his estate will certainly earn. Prince's
rival Michael Jackson earned $115 million last year, despite dying way
back in 2009. Elvis Presley hasn't recorded since Jimmy Carter was
President, yet his estate earned $55 million last year thanks to ticket
sales at his Graceland mansion. No one remembers the last time Elizabeth
Taylor performed without embarrassing herself, yet her estate earned
$20 million last year from her fragrance line. It's enough to make you
think that dying is just some sort of extreme viral marketing stunt.
The good news, at least for Prince's heirs, is that he was rich enough to survive his failure to plan. But are you?
Failing to plan for your legacy can be the most expensive mistake you
ever make, and could throw your heirs into years of struggle and grief.
So call us to help make sure that doesn't happen!
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