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March 2, 2022
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Trust Distributable Income

  • March 2, 2022
  • 1 reply
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I'm curious why a capital gain that's long-term because it was inherited and is retained by the trust, appears in the K-1 worksheet and the K-1s as a short-term gain.  As an ignorant amateur I wouldn't think it should appear at all since it isn't being distributed and why would it be identified as short-term?  I'm using TT Business.    

Best answer by Anonymous_

I found the problem.  I had first chosen to allocate capital gains to beneficiaries and then later changed that to retain the capital gains in the trust.  I discovered that Turbotax didn't change Schedule D to show the gain going to the trust.  It was showing short-term gains going to the beneficiaries.  When I corrected Schedule D, the DNI worksheet and K-1 worksheet were corrected.  Now there are no capital gains showing on the K-1s as it should be with the gains being retained by the trust.  More fun.  


That sounds about right; you have to be careful not to allocate gain to the beneficiaries (and to income) in the program.

1 reply

Employee
March 2, 2022

There must be an input error somewhere. 

 

Capital assets acquired by the trust from the decedent are considered to be held long-term.

 

March 2, 2022

On the 1041 the gain is shown as long-term and as undistributed trust income and is included with the trust's taxable income.  When given the option, I chose to not distribute the gain to the beneficiaries yet the gain appears on the k-1 worksheet and as short-term.  The strange thing is that the final amount distributed to beneficiaries is correct but the worksheets don't make sense, at least to me.  I wouldn't think undistributed capital gains should show up on a K-1.  I guess I should become a CPA before trying to do a trust return.