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November 4, 2024
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Wholly Discretionary Trust tax confusion..

  • November 4, 2024
  • 1 reply
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Hi,

my mother recently passed away.

Her will set up a Wholly Discretionary Trust (WDT) for me.

My brother is the trustee.

We live in Ohio.

 

My question is about how taxes are handled for the WDT.

According to a Morgan Stanley pdf on this, INCOME tax rates for trusts in 2024 are:  

  • $0 – $3,100:                 10%
  • $3,100 – $11,150:       24%
  • $11,150 – $15,200:     35%
  • $15,200+:                     37%

And then separately it lists Tax Rates on Long-Term CAPITAL GAINS and Qualified Dividends for Trusts as:

  • $0 – $3,100:                    0%
  • $3,100 – $15,450:        15%
  • $15,451+                       20%

In addition, it mentions Net Investment Income Tax of 3.8%. It seems this might only apply to individuals?

 

I'm struggling to understand a few things.

1. What is considered INCOME vs. CAPITAL GAINS for my WDT?

It's obvious for an individual, but how does a trust earn income? It can clearly earn capital gains by investing in a stock index and then realizing those gains by selling some of the stock. But income? It's not as if the trust is working and earning money, etc.

 

2. We anticipate that the WDT will earn about 8% in stock index each year, which would be about $20,000 per year of unrealized capital gains.

-If my brother leaves the whole $20,000 unrealized gains alone and neither sells it to realize the capital gains nor distributes it to me, as I understand it the $20,000 won't be taxed for that year. Is that right?

-Let's say he begins at a certain point to DISTRIBUTE say $12,000 per year to me. As I understand it, if he distributes $12,000 to me, in 2024 that will be taxed at the CAPITAL GAINS brackets listed above, so a $12,000 distribution to me would result in $1,335 of tax, is that right?

 

 

This seems very high for such a low income. As this will be my only source of income, is there any way to avoid paying such high taxes on a distribution of just $1,000 per month?

THANK YOU!

 

 

Best answer by M-MTax

1. You're not taxed on unrealized gains......only when something is sold for more than what was paid for it do you have a taxable gain.

2. The trust tax rates don't apply to your trust if all of the income and capital gains get distributed to you. Then, you pay tax on your 1040 from your part of the income and gain.

3. Income is a general term. Capital gains are taxed differently......at a lower rate.......than ordinary income like interest from a savings account. Capital gain happens when you sell a capital asset for more you paid for it.

4. The Net Investment Income Tax applies to trusts the same as individuals.

5. Trusts don't have "earned income" if they only invest in assets like stocks and bonds and mutual funds and deposit money in savings accounts or CDs.

6. In your example, if your brother leaves the $20,000 unrealized gains alone and neither sells it to realize the capital gains or otherwise then neither the trust nor you pay tax on it.

7. If the trust has capital gains and distributes it to you, that's still capital gain. The character of the income doesn't change when distributed from the trust to you.

1 reply

M-MTax
M-MTaxAnswer
November 4, 2024

1. You're not taxed on unrealized gains......only when something is sold for more than what was paid for it do you have a taxable gain.

2. The trust tax rates don't apply to your trust if all of the income and capital gains get distributed to you. Then, you pay tax on your 1040 from your part of the income and gain.

3. Income is a general term. Capital gains are taxed differently......at a lower rate.......than ordinary income like interest from a savings account. Capital gain happens when you sell a capital asset for more you paid for it.

4. The Net Investment Income Tax applies to trusts the same as individuals.

5. Trusts don't have "earned income" if they only invest in assets like stocks and bonds and mutual funds and deposit money in savings accounts or CDs.

6. In your example, if your brother leaves the $20,000 unrealized gains alone and neither sells it to realize the capital gains or otherwise then neither the trust nor you pay tax on it.

7. If the trust has capital gains and distributes it to you, that's still capital gain. The character of the income doesn't change when distributed from the trust to you.

November 4, 2024

THANK YOU so much for your detailed reply!

I had a few clarifying questions if I may.

 

1. So, if my WDT is invested all in stock index and earns $20,000 in unrealized gain one year. If my brother leaves $8,000 alone and sells $12,000 of the stock (realizing the gain) and distributes that $12,000 to me - then based on your answers the trust would declare no income that year and I personally would declare $12,000 of 1040 income on my personal return?

If that is correct, then do I declare it as capital gains or income?

And do I use the tax brackets for individuals rather than for trusts?

In other words, let's say I'm supposed to claim it as capital gains and with single filers, the 0% rate now applies to incomes up to $47,025 in 2024. So, would I pay $0 tax on the $12,000 distribution?

 

2. I totally understand capital gains from stocks and owing no tax if those gains aren't yet realized. However, let's say my brother invests some of the WDT into bonds, CDs or a savings account.

Is interest from bonds, CDs, high yield savings account considered capital gains or income?

 

Thanks!

M-MTax
November 4, 2024

1. Yes, you would report that as capital gain from the sale of the stock the trust sold. You use the tax bracket for individuals because you're reporting the gain on your return, your 1040. Now you have to be aware that the entire distribution is not taxable, just the gain that is distributed to you.

2. Interest from bonds, CDs, high yield savings accounts is all ordinary income, not capital gain. You don't get the favorable tax rates on interest income like you do with capital gains.