TP passed 01/10/18.
TP had a living trust. (don't ya love these things, I've learned to......not). Everything worked fine as intended legally.
A personal residence is in trust . 4 children are beneficiaries. All get along fine. One is a carpenter. He has been living free in the house, for about a year since passing doing minor repairs, upgrades since dod above as agreed per all siblings/trustee/beneficiaries. Now the house has been sold. The house has been treated as a capital asset in my opinion. Not rental. So most, not all, costs of improvement increase the basis of the house a tiny bit (tell me if you disagree and why). No depreciation to take.
Learned yesterday that IRA of TP had named beneficiary as the trust. One of the beneficiaries is my client. He had been telling me for 9 months "IRA is only money we have received, no money from the trust has been disbursed". He has not been lying of course just misinformed, misunderstands complexities and cash flows. Point is I was thinking very low if not zero income for trust so doesn't need to bring up possible tax liability. Wasn't even sure 1041 was necessary or beneficial. Well, that's gone now. It certainly is. Living trust directions list no requirement of post-death estate paying out income on any timeline that I can see. Plus K-1s I believe and they will be late unless I file extension ...right?
So brokerage correctly liquidated IRA to trust. Reported 1099-R as trust name and registration (that was a surprise to me....until I thought it through). Now first-year trust 1041 has material tax liability primarily from IRA distribution with limited expenses for 1st year of trust against it 2018. The trustee who is also one of four beneficiaries has no idea that a tax liability is about to be communicated from yours truly.
Question: Is there any stratagy\technique\rule I am unaware of that would allow bringing forward this capital improvement and/or some maintenance expenses that are solely for the primary residence that I anticipate using for 2nd of 2-year existence of trust for 2019 1041. Vs. using them against the capital gain of house value at sale. Hope this makes sense.
TP had a living trust. (don't ya love these things, I've learned to......not). Everything worked fine as intended legally.
A personal residence is in trust . 4 children are beneficiaries. All get along fine. One is a carpenter. He has been living free in the house, for about a year since passing doing minor repairs, upgrades since dod above as agreed per all siblings/trustee/beneficiaries. Now the house has been sold. The house has been treated as a capital asset in my opinion. Not rental. So most, not all, costs of improvement increase the basis of the house a tiny bit (tell me if you disagree and why). No depreciation to take.
Learned yesterday that IRA of TP had named beneficiary as the trust. One of the beneficiaries is my client. He had been telling me for 9 months "IRA is only money we have received, no money from the trust has been disbursed". He has not been lying of course just misinformed, misunderstands complexities and cash flows. Point is I was thinking very low if not zero income for trust so doesn't need to bring up possible tax liability. Wasn't even sure 1041 was necessary or beneficial. Well, that's gone now. It certainly is. Living trust directions list no requirement of post-death estate paying out income on any timeline that I can see. Plus K-1s I believe and they will be late unless I file extension ...right?
So brokerage correctly liquidated IRA to trust. Reported 1099-R as trust name and registration (that was a surprise to me....until I thought it through). Now first-year trust 1041 has material tax liability primarily from IRA distribution with limited expenses for 1st year of trust against it 2018. The trustee who is also one of four beneficiaries has no idea that a tax liability is about to be communicated from yours truly.
Question: Is there any stratagy\technique\rule I am unaware of that would allow bringing forward this capital improvement and/or some maintenance expenses that are solely for the primary residence that I anticipate using for 2nd of 2-year existence of trust for 2019 1041. Vs. using them against the capital gain of house value at sale. Hope this makes sense.
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