Avoiding Taxes Via the Irrevocable Trust Term Paper

Total Length: 675 words ( 2 double-spaced pages)

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Trusts and Taxes

"Gift Transfers and Gift Tax Planning"

An irrevocable trust could be used as a way to name beneficiaries and avoid estate taxes. Unlike a revocable trust, irrevocable trusts do not have to pay taxes. In this case, any assets that are placed in the irrevocable trust are no longer deemed to be assets of the settler; instead they are deemed assets of the trustee. The difference is that in a revocable trust, the settler can re-enter into the trust and have the assets retrieved. In an irrevocable trust, this is not allowed. Creditors cannot retrieve assets of the settler in an irrevocable trust, as they can in a revocable trust.

As Bay Financial Associates (2015) puts it, a revocable trust is like a "box with strings" on it -- and all one has to do is pull the string, and the box opens up. An irrevocable trust, on the other hand, has no strings attached. It is sealed up and assets cannot be retrieved by settler or creditor. The terms of the trust cannot be changed: it "cannot be revoked, altered, amended, or terminated by the grantor" (Bay Financial, 2015). The legal title to property -- aka the principal -- is transferred from the grantor to the trustee.

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The trustee becomes the administrator of the property and is responsible for maintaining it as well.

This will allow substantial estate tax savings, as the property will not be subject to them. It is a lifetime gift that is a very appropriate strategy for doing what the client would like to do in this occasion, which is to avoid paying hefty taxes on the estate. The only catch is that once the trust is created, the grantor no longer has any claim to the property and the trustee is the one who is responsible for its upkeep.

9. "Fairness of the Federal Estate Tax and Income and Principal in Fiduciary Accounting"

One of the major arguments for repeal of the federal estate tax are that it "would spur the economy and lift burdens on owners of small businesses and farms" (Ebeling, 2015). This is the main reason because not many people actually pay the federal estate tax: only .2% pay it -- mainly because of the enormous exclusion amount that can be used "before the tax kicks in" (Ebeling, 2015). Thus, the big push for repeal by Republicans last….....

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"Avoiding Taxes Via The Irrevocable Trust" (2016, May 29) Retrieved June 1, 2025, from
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/avoiding-taxes-via-irrevocable-trust-2160780

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"Avoiding Taxes Via The Irrevocable Trust" 29 May 2016. Web.1 June. 2025. <
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Latest Chicago Format (16th edition)

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"Avoiding Taxes Via The Irrevocable Trust", 29 May 2016, Accessed.1 June. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/avoiding-taxes-via-irrevocable-trust-2160780