Testamentary Charitable
Remainder Trust
(TCRT or TCRUT)
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When incorporated
into an estate plan, the testamentary charitable remainder
trust is created within the estate documents, which typically stipulate
that at death, the trust be funded with tax-encumbered (IRD) assets
to the extent these assets are available. The trust will pay out a prescribed
percentage of the trust value annually to the heirs; this percentage
and the duration of the payments are determined in the estate documents.
After the set period of time, a designated charity receives the remainder
of the interest in the trust. The trust assets grow tax-free, and the
TCRUT gives the estate an estate tax deduction on a portion of the assets
that go into the trust.
With a TCRUT,
a payout percentage (5% or more) is specified within the estate
documents, as is a period of time for the unitrust to make distributions
to personal beneficiaries. Actual payments are determined by this payout
percentage and the value of the assets in the trust. Many people choose
to pay the unitrust amount to family members for a period of time that
will pay out an amount equal to the initial value of the property.
For example,
a trust that pays 7% for fifteen years will pay family members an income
equaling approximately the initial fair market value of the property.
In this way, the donor is able to double the total benefits from the
property: once to the family through income payments, and once to the
charities through distribution of the principal after all income payments
are completed.
One advantage
of the charitable remainder unitrust (CRUT)
is that the amount remaining in the trust grows tax-free. For example,
if a person selected a 6% payout trust and the trust investments earned
8%, there would be 2% growth tax-free each year. This tax-free growth
could substantially increase the value of the trust over time, and since
the selected 6% payout is based on this value, distributions to personal
beneficiaries would increase proportionally.
The ability
of the unitrust to increase both in principal and in income payments
over a period of years is frequently referred to as an inflation hedge.
However, please understand that this benefit does not come without risk.
In the above example, if the growth in the trust falls short of the
payout (6% in this instance), income payments to beneficiaries will
actually decline with time.
In assessing
the utilization of CRUTs, we generally recommend that this
option only be considered if at least $100,000 is available to fund
this trust; otherwise, administrative expenses will likely negate much
of the benefit.
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