I was reviewing something this week we may not have discussed before. Mind you, there is a reason we haven’t: it is a high-rent problem, not easy to understand or likely to ever apply to us normals. If you work or advise in this area (as attorney, CPA, trustee or so on), however, it can wreck you if you miss it.
Let’s talk a bit about the generation skipping tax. It
sometimes abbreviated “GST,” and I generally refer to it as the “skip.”
Why does this thing even exist?
It has to do with gift and estate taxes.
You know the gift tax: you are allowed to make annual gifts
up to a certain amount per donee before having to report the gifts to the IRS.
Even then, you are spotted an allowance for lifetime gifts. While there may be
paperwork, you do not actually pay gift tax until you exhaust that lifetime
allowance.
You know the estate tax: die with enough assets and you
may have a death tax. Once again, there is an allowance, and no tax is due
until you exceed that allowance. The 2024 lifetime exemption is $13.6 million
per person, so you can be wealthy and still avoid this tax.
As I said, we are discussing high-end tax problems.
Then there is the third in this group of taxes: the
generation skipping tax. It is there as a backstop. Without it, gift and estate
taxes would lose a significant amount of their bite.
Why Does the Skip Exist?
Let go through an example.
When does the estate tax apply (setting aside that
super-high lifetime exemption for this discussion)?
It applies when (a) someone with a certain level of
assets (b) dies.
How would a planner work with this?
Here is an idea: what if one transfers assets to
something that itself cannot die? Without a second death, the estate tax is not
triggered again.
What cannot die, without going all Lovecraftian?
How about a corporation?
Or – more likely – a trust?
When Does The Skip Apply?
It applies when someone transfers assets
to a skip person.
Let’s keep this understandable and not go through
every exception or exception to the exception.
A skip person is someone two or more generations below
the transferor.
EXAMPLE:
· A
transfer to my kid would not be a skip.
· A
transfer to my grandchild would be a skip.
What Constitutes a Transfer?
There are two main types:
· I
simply transfer assets to my grandchild. Perhaps she finishes her medical
degree, and I buy and deed her first house.
· I
transfer assets through a trust.
The first type is called a direct skip. Those
are relatively easy to spot, trigger the skip immediately and require a tax
filing.
You already know the form on which the skip is
reported: the gift tax return itself (Form 709). The form has additional sections
when the skip tax applies.
EXAMPLE:
· I
give my son a hundred grand. This is over the annual dollar limit, so a gift
tax return is required. My son is not a skip person, so I need not concern
myself with the skip tax sections of Form 709.
· I
give my grandson a hundred grand. This is over the annual limit, so a gift tax
return is required. My grandson is also a skip person, so I need to complete
the skip tax sections of Form 709.
What Is the Second Type of Transfer?
Use a trust.
Here is an example:
- Create a trust in a state that has relaxed its rule against perpetuities (RAP).
a. This
rule comes from English common law, and its intent was to limit how long a
person can control the ownership and transfer of property after his/her death.
- Fund
the trust at the settlor’s death.
a. If
that someone is Jeff Bezos or Elon Musk, there could be some serious money
involved here.
- The settlor’s children receive distributions from the trust. When they die, the settlor’s grandchildren take their place.
- When
the grandchildren die, the great grandchildren take their place, and so on.
What we described above BTW is a dynasty trust.
The key here is - before the skip tax entered the Code
in the 1970s - the then-existing gift and estate tax rules would NOT pull that
trust back onto anyone’s estate return for another round of taxation.
Congress was not amused.
And you can see why a skip is defined as two
generations below the transferor. Congress wanted a bite into that apple every
generation, if possible.
How Does Skipping Through A Trust Work?
There are two main ways:
EXAMPLE ONE: Say the trust has a mix of skip and nonskip beneficiaries, say children (nonskip) and grandchildren (skip). The IRS chills, because the trust might yet be includable in the taxable estate of a nonskip person. Say the last nonskip person dies (leaving only skips as beneficiaries) AND nothing is includable in an estate return somewhere. Yeah, no: this will trigger the skip tax. To make things confusing, the skip refers to this as a “termination,” even though nothing has actually terminated.
EXAMPLE TWO: The trust again has a mix of skip and nonskip beneficiaries. This just like the preceding, except we will not kill-off the nonskip beneficiary. Instead, the trust simply distributes to a skip or skips (say the grandchildren or great-grandchildren). This triggers the skip tax and is easier to identify and understand.
If Skipping Through A Trust, When Is the Tax
Due?
Look at Example One above. This could be years – or decades
– after the creation of the trust.
The trustee is supposed to recognize that there has
been a skip “termination” of the trust. The trustee would file the (Form 709) tax
return, and the trust would pay the skip tax.
And – yes – in the real world it is a problem. What if
the trustee (or attorney or CPA) misses the termination as a taxable event?
Malpractice, that’s what. An insurance company will probably
be involved.
What About Example Two?
This is a backstop to the first type of transfer. In
the second type there is still a nonskip beneficiary, meaning that the trust
has not “terminated” for skip purposes. The trust distributes, but the
distribution goes to a skip.
Say the trust distributes a 1965 Shelby Mustang GT350 R.
First, nice.
Second, the skip tax is paid by the beneficiary
receiving the distribution. The trust does not pay this one.
Third, the trustee may want to warn the beneficiary
that he/she owes skip tax on a car worth at least $3.5 million.
Fourth, realistically the trust is going to pay,
whether upfront or as a reimbursement to the beneficiary. The tax paid is
itself subject to the skip tax if it comes out of the trust.
How Much Is the Skip Tax?
Right now, it is 40 percent.
It changes with changes to the gift and estate tax
rates.
That 1965 Shelby GT 350R comes with a skip tax of at
least $1.4 million. It takes a lot of green to ride mean.
The skip is very much a function of using trusts in
estate planning.
Trust taxation can be oddball on its own.
Introduce skip tax and you can go near hallucinatory.
This is a good spot for us to break.
We will return next post to continue our skip talk.