| |
| |
| Estate planning for
insecure times. |
From The Tax Adviser:
Intentionally
Defective Irrevocable Trusts
n tumultuous economic times, intentionally
defective irrevocable trusts (IDITs) offer taxpayers a
powerful triple play: an estate-freeze and
wealth-transfer technique, as well as an estate planning
opportunitydespite terrorism, the markets
vagaries and recent estate tax legislation. CPAs should
become become familiar with IDITs to help eligible
clients preserve wealth.
WHAT
IS AN IDIT?
An IDIT is an irrevocable
trust; it takes advantage of a disparity between the
income and estate tax treatments offered certain trusts
under IRC sections 674 and 675. Because an IDIT is deemed
a grantor trust for income tax purposes, the trust
grantor reports the trusts income annually;
however, the trust assets are not includable in the
grantors estate for estate tax purposes. A grantor
can sell appreciating assets to an IDIT in exchange for a
note, freezing the value of his or her estate
and transferring wealth by converting an appreciating
asset into a fixed-yield asset (for example, an
interest-bearing note).
HOW
DOES IT WORK?
A grantor
seeds an IDIT with cash or property that
creates a taxable gift. He or she then sells an asset to
the IDIT for an installment note. Under regulations
section 1.1001-2(c), example 5 (see also revenue ruling
85-13 and Madorin, 84 TC 667 (1985)), the
grantor does not recognize gain or loss on a sale of an
asset to the IDIT. Similarly, the grantor pays no tax on
the interest payments received on the note, but pays tax
on all of the trusts income. If the grantor dies
during the notes term, the IRS might argue that
under Madorin the gain should be recognized.
However, the grantors estate may be able to defer
the gain under the section 453 installment-sale rules,
until the note is fully paid off (see Sun First
Natl Bank of Orlando, 607 F2d 1347 (Ct. Cl.
1979)).
With an IDIT, a grantor can discount
assets transferred or sold due to lack of marketability
or a minority interest, reducing their fair market value,
the taxable gift and the promissory note. Grantors should
carefully choose the assets to be sold to maximize the
wealth-transfer opportunity.
PLANNING
STRATEGIES
Despite the anticipated
steady decline in estate tax rates, the estate tax will
return in 2011. Even though high-net-worth taxpayers hope
for permanent tax repeal, this seems unlikely. The
uncertainty of repeal, coupled with the turbulent times,
however, make an IDIT a viable estate planning tool. For
example, a grantor can benefit from low asset valuations
and interest rates. He or she needs a smaller amount of
seed money, thus reducing gift tax. Because low interest
rates cap annual interest payments on a promissory note,
the grantor can manage cash flow better until the note
matures.
CONCLUSION
A thorough consideration
of all the possibilities makes an IDIT an appealing
estate planning tool and can give taxpayers experiencing
difficult economic times realistic expectations of the
results to be achieved. With IDITs, CPAs can help clients
weather the economic storm.
For more information, see the column,
Personal Financial Planning, by Alev Lewis, in the
January 2003 issue of The Tax Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
| Notice to readers: Members of the AICPA tax
section may subscribe to The Tax Adviser at
a reduced price. Contact Judy Smith at
202-434-9270 for a subscription to the magazine
or to become a member of the tax section.section. |
|