San Diego Tax Blog

San Diego Tax Blog

Monday, January 27, 2014

Estate Tax Planning: QTIP Trusts

Do you care what happens to your assets after you die?

I suspect that it is very important to you.  You may want to make sure that your spouse is provided for, or that your children will be the ones that inherit your property.  What you probably do not want is to pay a penny more in estate taxes than you have to.


Everyone's situation is different, and an estate planning tool that may work for someone else may not work for you.  Therefore, it is very important that you work closely with an estate planning attorney and a CPA to come up with a plan that will best fit your needs.

A few months ago we discussed one estate tax planning tool, the portability election.  Today, I am going to go over the basics of the Qualified Terminal Interest Property (QTIP) trust.

What are the goals of a QTIP Trust?
While there are potential estate tax minimization benefits to this type of trust, the primary benefits to making the QTIP election are in maintaining control of the assets after death.  Specifically, it allows you to provide for your spouse during the remainder of his/her life, but ensure that ultimately the assets will go to the beneficiaries that you choose.

Because of this, QTIP trusts are very popular in situations where one spouse has children from a different relationship or where remarriage after the death of the first spouse is likely.

How does the QTIP Trust work?
Under the terms of the QTIP trust, all of the income earned by the assets placed in the trust goes to the surviving spouse.  In addition, most QTIP Trusts allow for the trustee to give the surviving spouse some of the trust principal (the assets) in addition to the income if it serves a specific purpose.  For example, if there is a medical emergency and the surviving spouse does not have enough money to pay for treatment, the trustee may be allowed by the trust to take assets out of the trust to pay the medical bill.

Upon the death of the surviving spouse, all of the trust assets will go to the beneficiaries named by the first to die (the spouse who originally funded the QTIP trust).

What are the estate tax benefits?
The assets placed into a QTIP trust qualify for the unlimited marital estate tax deduction.  This means that they will not be subject to the estate tax at the time of the first spouse to die's death.  However, these assets will be included in the surviving spouse's estate and subject to the estate tax at the surviving spouse's death.  If the portability election is made at the time of the first spouse to die's death, the surviving spouse will be able to use his/her prior deceased spouse's unused exclusion amount in addition to his/her own exclusion.

If you think that the QTIP trust is an estate planning tool that may work for you, I would be happy to refer you to a great estate planning attorney.

I would also be happy to answer estate tax planning questions that you have. Please just send me an e-mail.

As always, please leave your feedback in the comments section below.

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