Either you can change the filing status to Joint Tenancy with Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS)
You mean you want to deed the property to that form of ownership. JTWROS is not a "filing status." You can't just change anything.
which you would give person B 50% ownership to person A's property. If person A dies, then Person B gets 100% ownership to the property. I believe that this avoids probate in court but need verification.
Yes, it does, but understand strongly what you said in the first sentence there. You gave away half the property. Joint tenancy can be terminated unilaterally by either party. B could change it to tenancy in common and break the survivorship right of A.
Or, if the state has one available, Person A can fill out a transfer of death (TOD). So when person A dies, person B (beneficiary) receives 100% of the property. This avoids probate in court.
Yes, but note that if B dies first, the property goes to A's estate, not to B's estate or heirs. Don't know if that's what you want or not.
I recently went to an attorney seminar trying to educate people on the benefits of trusts.
Seminars where they're trying to sell you a specific product are lousy ways to get legal advice.
1) They claim that "joint tenancy", the way in which many married couples hold property, does not avoid probate.
Absent knowing exactly what point they are trying to make I don't know. On it's face it is indeed incorrect.
2) They also claim that holding title to property as "joint tenants" may cost you thousands of dollars in capital gains taxes on the death of the first to die.
I thought that capital gains would only be if you have sold the property and then only if the gain on the sale of the personal residence was greater then the capital gains exclusion amounts. Inheritance of property does not generate capital gains taxes.
Again, I'm not sure what they're trying to claim not hearing it, but there's a difference between getting property by survivorship rights and by inheriting it (via a trust or will).
Let's say A buys a property for $10,000. Later he marries (or otherwise gets associated with B) and deeds the house from him to A and B jointly.
If the house is sold for $100,000 (we'll omit real estate commisions and other adjustements to basis for simplicity), a capital gain occurs of $90,000.
Now let's say A just dies. Now B already owned half and B's basis was $5,000 on that half. B inherits A's part which the basis steps up to the FMV. Half of the FMV is $50,000. B's basis for the whole house is now $55,000. If B sells the house for $100,000, there's a gain of $45,000.
Now instead, lets say A retains ownership (outright or in a trust). When A dies, if B is the sole heir/benefiicary, the whole property steps up to the FMV of $100,000.
If B sells no gain is due.