Integrating Your Business Succession Plan into Your Estate Strategy
EP Wealth’s Dallin Cutler, CFP®, shares how business owners can align succession planning with estate strategy to manage taxes, liquidity, and legacy...
Dallin Cutler, CFP®
Vice President/Partner
Salt Lake City, Utah
Dallin Cutler
EP Wealth’s Dallin Cutler, CFP®, shares how business owners can align succession planning with estate strategy to manage taxes, liquidity, and legacy goals.
In my experience, business succession and estate planning are often treated as separate conversations—when in reality, they’re deeply intertwined. Each one needs to be viewed through the lens of the other, and one of our key roles as financial advisors is to help clients step back and see that full picture.
A big part of the value we bring is that we’ve been through this process with other business owners. We can explain the financial and tax consequences of each decision and help evaluate the best-case scenario, worst-case scenario, and everything in between.
Frankly, this kind of complex planning is one of the main reasons clients work with financial advisors in the first place. It requires input from attorneys, CPAs, valuation experts, and others, but where we often make the most difference is in bringing those voices together. We’re the quarterback. Estate attorneys or CPAs might see themselves in that role—and they’re certainly driving important parts of the process—but I believe advisors have the most visibility into the client’s full financial life. That’s what makes us well-positioned to guide the strategy in a way that best reflects their long-term goals.
In this blog, I’ll walk through five areas to consider:
One common issue I see is when a client has a clear plan for transferring ownership of the business, but hasn’t given any thought to estate taxes or how to provide an equitable inheritance for heirs who aren’t involved in the business. Sometimes we see good succession planning, but no estate planning around it. And that can lead to problems later.
There’s also the risk that something unexpected happens—like the death or incapacity of the owner—before the transition is complete. When there’s a lack of coordination between the operating agreement, the buy-sell agreement, and the estate plan, you can end up with ownership transfers the client didn’t intend, disputes among beneficiaries, or even a liquidity crunch at exactly the wrong time.

The first step is figuring out how you want to sell or transfer your business. I let the client lead here. My role is to help lay out the tax, financial, and estate implications of each possible direction. I often describe this as a CEO-CFO relationship: the client acts as the CEO, with the vision and goals, while I provide the financial perspective and help build a path forward.
Some of the key questions we walk through include:
How advisors support the transition:
Many business owners will eventually face estate tax exposure. For 2025, the federal estate and gift tax exemption is $13.99 million per person, or $27.98 million for a married couple using portability. That’s the starting point. Those exemption limits are scheduled to drop in 2026, though it’s possible that Congress will act to extend them.
If a client’s estate is projected to exceed those amounts, the question becomes: what do we do about it?
One common strategy is to move assets out of the estate while they’re still appreciating. If a business is expected to grow significantly, transferring a portion of it early means that the future appreciation can occur outside of the estate. This can potentially reduce the estate’s taxable value and create more flexibility for future generations.
That said, these strategies often involve irrevocable decisions. You typically give up control of the asset by placing it into a trust. That’s why we bring in estate attorneys to walk through the nuances and help decide whether the trade-off is worthwhile.
Some of the more common tools we consider include:
Key Areas Where Succession and Estate Strategies Intersect

The timing of these strategies can be really important. I often talk with business owners about not just what steps to take, but when to take them. This is especially true when growth, valuation, or tax law changes are on the horizon.
If your business is worth $10 million now and expected to triple in the next five years, it may be better to move some of it out of your estate now rather than later, before it grows beyond the exemption limit. This approach is often called an “estate freeze” because it locks in the current value for estate tax purposes, allowing future appreciation to occur outside the estate. But there’s a risk in that as well. If the growth doesn’t materialize, you may have made an irrevocable move without much benefit.
We often talk to clients about timing from the perspective of valuation. Gifting or selling ownership when the business is valued lower—or when minority discounts can still be applied—may reduce the tax impact of the transfer.
There’s also a timeline issue around the federal exemption. If it drops in 2026 as scheduled, some clients will lose the window to shift larger portions of their estate. That’s one reason we talk about aligning estate strategy with both growth expectations and the legislative environment.
Finally, we help plan the timing of liquidity events, especially for clients whose businesses are illiquid. If you wait too long, and your heirs don’t have cash available to cover estate taxes or buyouts, it can lead to forced sales or conflict among beneficiaries.
When a business is passed on to some but not all children, estate planning becomes more complicated. Some heirs may be active in the business; others are not. We use tools like:
I also encourage regular family meetings. Even if everything is documented legally, the family should understand the ‘why’ behind the plan. That transparency goes a long way toward managing future tension.
Liquidity is often discussed in terms of taxes, but that’s not the only reason it’s important. Heirs may need time to settle the estate, manage transitions, or meet other obligations. Without liquidity, they may be forced to sell assets or borrow against the business.
Some of the ways we address this include:
For example, we might ask: Does the business have enough cash reserves to buy out the owner’s interest so that money can then be passed on to heirs? That kind of question is easy to overlook until it becomes urgent.
To wrap up, I’ll go back to the idea of the advisor as the quarterback. We’re looking at this from the client’s perspective. We know their tax picture, their estate structure, their business, and family dynamics. And we’ve spent enough time with them to know what they want to happen if something unexpected occurs.
In this kind of planning, there are always competing interests. Estate attorneys may lean toward creating new trusts or restructuring the business because that’s their job, and often it’s a good idea. But sometimes I’ll say, I don’t think we need to rush into that decision. Maybe this isn’t the right time for something irrevocable.
I recognize that advisors, too, can bring their own biases to the process, such as favoring early liquidity because it means more money for them to work with. Ultimately, it’s not about pointing fingers; it’s about being aware of these dynamics and helping manage them in a way that keeps the client’s goals always at the center.
That’s the role we play: bringing in experienced professionals, creating space for healthy debate, and working towards a plan actually works for the person it’s designed to serve.
Contact us today to learn more about our services.
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