Parent wishing to pass residence to children but maintain a life estate. Which in general is better and why - Defective Life Estate or regular Life Estate? Also, is an Intentional Defective Irrevocable Trust the same as a Defective Life Estate. Thanks.
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Defective Life Estate
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Jan
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If a taxpayer wants the Estate to avoid Probate and still have the beneficiary get, the step-up base on the property (taxpayer home). What is the best way to hold title to there home?
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this kind of nonsense
>>What is the best way to hold title to their home?<<
Solomon, you are asking a legal question on a tax forum. An intentionally defective irrevocable trust is intended to look like an incomplete gift under federal tax laws but a completed gift under state inheritance laws. Whether that is appropriate for a particular family depends on a lot of things other than tax law. So talk to a local attorney who specializes in estates and trusts, and stop reading those magazines that push this kind of nonsense.
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Jan
Regarding your question on best way to pass on a house to a child. What is known as the Enhanced Life Estate Deed is a good way. The remainderman gets step up basis. It also does not have some of the pitfalls of doing this with a quitclaim deed - for example, with a quitclaim one has to get beneficary approval to sell the property. Retainee of Enchanced Life Estate can also sell the property without beneficiary approval and get a Sec. 121 exclusion if desired. Other good things. Problem it is only availabe in a few states - one of which is Texas - that it is why it is also called the Lady Bird Deed. President Johnson utilized this approach and that is why it picked his wife's name as a nickname for it. I believe Florida and Kansas also use it - perhaps a few more states. You can check to see if you are in a state that approves. As mentioned, it is a incomplete gift until retainee's death thus giving step up to beneficiary. It also, one of your concerns, avoids probate.Last edited by solomon; 09-08-2006, 05:55 PM.
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