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Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT)

Posted On: March 21st 2010

A QPRT is an irrevocable trust holding a personal residence, where the grantor retains the right to use and occupy the residence for a fixed period of time, (income interest), and the principal remaining at the end of the trust term passes to the remainderman, (a non-charity beneficiary). QPRT may also hold cash for certain purposes. A taxpayer may create a QPRT for a primary and one other residence for a maximum of two.

The gift is calculated at the outset, when the trust is setup. The gift is the value of the future interest to the remainderman. There is potential for significant gift tax and estate tax savings because the taxable gift is calculated using the time value of money. The estate is effectively frozen, and the appreciation of the asset passes to the beneficiaries, escaping gift and estate tax.

The goal is for the trust term to be long enough to give a low gift tax value, and short enough that the grantor will outlive it. If the grantor dies before the trust term, then the assets are included in the grantor’s estate at their values as of her date of death.

EXAMPLE:

Facts:

7520 interest rate 6%, Grantor is age 75, 7 year trust term, 50% estate tax rate

Fair market value of residence at inception = $1,000,000

Present value of retained interest is .334943 * 1,000,000 = 334,943

Growth of value in residence is 4% per year, or $1,315,932 after 7 years

Value of property at gift $ 1,000,000

Less: Value of income interest retained (334,943)

Value of future interest gift (to remainderman) $ 665,057

FMV at end of year 7 $ 1,315,932

Less: Gift value at year 1 ( 665,057)

650,875

* Estate tax rate * 50%

Estate tax savings $ 325,438

AND probate costs are avoided because property passes outside of probate.

Some important points in planning a QPRT:

Get appraisal of residence placing in trust

A written lease for term after lease if grantor will remain

Lease at fair market value if grantor will remain

Consider discussing wishes of remainderman in property – may desire side agreement to make clear intent

Trustee should be other than grantor or grantor’s spouse

Life insurance (received estate tax free) on grantor’s life to provide estate liquidity to pay estate tax

Considerations for property placing in QPRT:

Mortgage on premises

Improvements made to premises additional gifts (compliance returns required)

Sale of residence before trust term expires

Tax considerations of QPRT:

Grantor trust – income / expense items flow to grantor (property taxes)

Exclusion on sale of home available if meet tests

Gift, so carry over basis upon sale by remaindermen

Gift splitting by non-grantor spouse lost if grantor does not survive trust term

QPRT after the trust term:

Trust must state grantor (or spouse) may not repurchase residence

Grantor may lease residence from remaindermen at fair market rent

Want “arm’s length transaction”

No string to pull back to grantor’s estate

Letter from broker to support rent amount

Local newpaper rental advertisements could support rent amount

Rent adjusted downward if grantor pays property taxes, etc.

Deed and transfer documents to transfer title to remaindermen

Insurance in name of remaindermen

Disadvantages of QPRT:

Transaction costs (appraiser, legal, title costs)

Lost opportunity cost of large gifts during lifetime of grantor

Consider state issue – Florida homestead exemption lost for out of state trusts as owner

Causes considerable increase in property taxes

Control / family issues

Appreciation may be less than think, consider current market and length of trust term.