I saw a QPRT here at Galactic Command recently,
It had been a while. These things are not as common in
a low interest rate environment.
A QPRT (pronounced “cue-pert”) is a specialized trust.
It holds a primary or secondary residence and – usually – that is it.
Why in the world would someone do this?
I’ll give you a
common example: to own a second home.
Let’s say that you have a second home, perhaps a lake or mountain home. The children and grandchildren congregate there every year (say summer for a lake home or the holidays for a mountain home), and you would like for this routine and its memories to continue after you are gone.
A couple of alternatives come immediately to mind:
(1) You can bequeath the property under will when
you die.
(2) You can gift the property now.
Each has it pros and cons.
(1) The property could continue to appreciate. If you have significant other assets, this appreciation could cause or exacerbate potential estate taxes down the road.
(2) You enjoy having and using the property and are not quite ready to part with it. You might be ready years from now - you know: when you are “older.”
A QPRT might work. Here is what happens:
(1) You create an irrevocable trust.
a. Irrevocable
means that you cannot undo the trust. There are no backsies.
(2) You transfer a residence to the trust.
a. The
technique works better if there is no mortgage on the property. For one thing,
if there is a mortgage, you must get money into the trust to make the mortgage
payment. Hint: it can be a mess.
(3) You reserve the right to use the property for a period of years.
a. This
is where the fancy planning comes in.
b. It
starts off with the acknowledgement that a dollar today is more valuable than a
dollar a year (or years) from now. This is the “time value of money.”
c. At
some point in time the property is going to the kids and grandkids, but … not …
right …now.
d. If
the property is worth a million dollars today, the time value of money tells us
that the gift (that is, when the property goes to the kids and grandkids) must be
less than a million dollars.
e. There
is a calculation here to figure out the amount of the gift. There are three key
variables:
i. The
age of the person making the gift
ii. The
trust term
iii. An
interest rate
A critical requirement of a QPRT is that you must
outlive the trust term. The world doesn’t end if you do not (well, it does end
for you), but the trust itself goes “poof.” Taxwise, it would be as if you
never created a trust at all.
(4) There is a mortality consideration implicit here. The math is not the same for someone aged 50 compared to someone aged 90.
(5) Your retained right of use is the same thing as the trust term. You probably lean toward this period being as long as possible (if a dollar a year from now is worth less than a dollar today, imagine a dollar ten years from now!). That reduces the amount of the gift, which is good, but remember that you must outlive the trust term. There is push-and-pull here, and trust terms of 10 to 15 years are common.
We also need an interest rate to pull this sled. The government
fortunately provides this rate.
But let’s go sidebar for a moment.
Let’s say you need to put away enough money today to
have $5 a year from now. You put it in a bank CD, so the only help coming is
the interest the CD will pay. Let’s say the CD pays 2%. How much do you have to
put away today?
· $5
divided by (100% + 2%) = $4.90
OK.
How much do you have to put away if the CD pays 6%?
· $5
divided by (100% + 6%) = $4.72
It makes sense if you think about it. If the interest
rate increases, then it is doing more of the heavy lifting to get you to $5.
Another way to say this is that you need to put less away today, because the
higher interest is picking up the slack.
Let’s flip this.
Say the money you are putting in the CD constitutes a
gift. How much is your gift in the first example?
$4.90
How much is your gift in the second example?
$4.72
Your gift is less in the second example.
The amount of your gift goes down as interest rates go
up.
What have interest rates been doing recently?
Rising, of course.
That makes certain interest-sensitive tax strategies
more attractive.
Strategies like a QPRT.
Which explains why I had not seen any for a while.
Let me point out something subtle about this type of
trust.
· What
did we say was the amount of the gift in the above examples?
· Either
$4.90 or $4.72, depending.
· When
did the gift occur?
· When
the trust was funded.
· When
do the kids and grandkids take over the property?
· Years
down the road.
· How
can you have a gift now when the property doesn’t transfer until years from
now?
· It’s
tax magic.
But what it does is freeze the value of that house for
purposes of the gift. The house could double or triple in value before it
passes to the kids and grandkids without affecting the amount of your gift.
That math was done upfront and will not change.
A couple of more nerd notes:
(6) We are also going to make the QPRT a “grantor” trust. This means that we have introduced language somewhere in the trust document so that the IRS does not consider the QPRT to be a “real” trust, at least for income tax purposes. Since it is not a “real” trust, it does not file a “real” income tax return. If so, how and where do the trust numbers get reported to the IRS? They will be reported on the grantor’s tax return (hence “grantor trust”). In this case, the grantor is the person who created the QPRT.
(7) What happens after 10 (or 15 or whatever) years? Will the trust just kick you out of the house?
Nah, but you will have to pay fair-market rent when you use the place. It is not worst case.
There are other considerations with QPRTs – like
selling the place, qualifying for the home sale exclusion, and forfeiting the
step-up upon the grantor’s death. We’ll leave those topics for another day,
though.
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