Layne Rushforth's Estate Planning Pages Irrevocable Trusts
Current Gifts and Transfers with Deferred Benefits

Irrevocable Trusts

Insurance and Irrevocable Insurance Trusts

Generation-Skipping Trusts

Trusts are created to provide for the management of trust assets until those assets are distributed. Trusts inherently involve a deferral of distributions, usually until the death of the trust's settlor (creator), until a beneficiary reaches a particular age, or until some other identfiable event occurs. A "generation-skipping trust" is a trust that continues more than one generation. It is usually designed as a "bypass trust" for estate tax purposes so that the taxation of assets skips a generation.

Grantor Trusts

"Grantor Trusts" are not a type of trust, but rather an income tax classification. A trust is considered a "grantor trust" if the settlor (grantor) has certain powers over the trust or if others have too many powers over the trust that might be exercised in favor of the settlor. All taxable income that is paid to a grantor trust will be taxed to the trust's settlor as if the settlor owned the income-producing assets.

S Corporation Stock

An irrevocable trust can be designed to hold S corporation* stock in one of three ways: (a) as a grantor trust; (b) as a qualified subchapter S trust ("QSST"); or (c) as an electing small business trust ("ESBT"). While the trust's settlor (creator) is alive, the easiest method is usually to have the trust qualify as a grantor trust. Even if an irrevocable trust is originally designed to hold assets other than stock in an S corporation, it is wise to give the trustee authority (and perhaps the directive) to make the trust qualify as either a QSST or an ESBT.

*[NOTE: An "S corporation" is a domestic corporation that has filed a special tax election with the Internal Revenue Service to be tax under "Subchapter S" of the income tax laws. An S corporation usually pays no tax, and its shareholders are taxed somewhat like partners. In the absence of an election to be an S corporation, corporations are taxed under Subchapter C, so corporations that are not S corporations are sometimes called "C corporations", although you will not find that term in the Internal Revnue Code.]

Other Irrevocable Trusts


These materials continue in the article entitled "Charitable Trusts".


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Updated 24 July 1999.


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