Paperwork Reduction Act Notice.
We ask for the information on this form to carry out the Internal
Revenue laws of the United States. You are required to give us the
information. We need it to ensure that you are complying with these
laws and to allow us to figure and collect the right amount of tax.
You are not required to provide the information requested on a form
that is subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act unless the form
displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records relating to a
form or its instructions must be retained as long as their contents
may become material in the administration of any Internal Revenue law.
Generally, tax returns and return information are confidential, as
required by section 6103.
The time needed to complete and file this form will vary depending
on individual circumstances. The average estimated time is:
Form |
Recordkeeping |
Learning about the law or the form
|
Preparing the form |
Copying, assembling, and sending the
form to the IRS |
706-GS(T) |
40 min. |
29 min. |
32 min. |
20 min. |
Schedule A |
13 min. |
17 min. |
38 min. |
20 min. |
Schedule B |
13 min. |
4 min. |
20 min. |
20 min. |
If you have comments concerning the accuracy of these estimates or
suggestions for making this form simpler, we would be happy to hear
from you. You can write to the Tax Forms Committee, Western Area
Distribution Center, Rancho Cordova, CA 95743-0001. DO NOT
send the form to this address. Instead, see Where To File
below.
General Instructions
Purpose of Form
Form 706-GS(T) is used by a trustee to figure and report the tax
due from certain trust terminations that are subject to the
generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax.
When To File
Generally, the trustee must file Form 706-GS(T) by April 15th of
the year following the calendar year in which the termination occurs.
If the due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, file on
the next business day.
If you are not able to file the return by the due date, you may
request an extension of time to file by filing Form 2758,
Application for Extension of Time To File Certain Excise,
Income, Information, and Other Returns. This is not an automatic
extension, so be sure to file Form 2758 in adequate time to allow the
IRS to consider the application and to reply before the return's
regular due date.
Where To File
File Form 706-GS(T) at the Internal Revenue Service Center
indicated below for the state where an estate or gift tax return of
the settlor must be filed to report the most recent transfer to the
trust. If the settlor is (or was at death) a nonresident citizen or
alien, mail it to the Internal Revenue Service Center, Philadelphia,
PA 19255, U.S.A.
|
|
Florida, Georgia, South Carolina
|
Atlanta, GA 39901
|
New Jersey, New York (New York City and counties of Nassau, Rockland, Suffolk, and Westchester)
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Holtsville, NY 00501
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New York (all other counties), Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
|
Andover, MA 05501
|
Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin
|
Kansas City, MO 64999
|
Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia
|
Philadelphia, PA 19255
|
Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia
|
Cincinnati, OH 45999
|
Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas
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Austin, TX 73301
|
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee
|
Memphis, TN 37501
|
Alaska, Arizona, California (counties of Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, El Dorado, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Mendocino, Modoc, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Yolo, and Yuba), Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wyoming
|
Ogden, UT 84201
|
California (all other counties), Hawaii
|
Fresno, CA 93888
|
Who Must File
In general, the trustee of any trust that has a taxable termination
(defined on page 2) must file Form 706-GS(T) for the tax year in which
the termination occurred.
Trusts
Nonexplicit trusts.
An arrangement that has substantially the same effect as a trust
will be treated as a trust even though it is not an explicit trust.
Examples of such arrangements are insurance and annuity contracts,
arrangements involving life estates and remainders, and estates for
years.
In general, a transfer of property in which the identity of the
transferee is conditioned on the occurrence of an event is a transfer
in trust. This rule does not apply to a testamentary trust, however,
if the event is to occur within 6 months of the transferor's date of
death.
Nonexplicit trusts do not include decedents' estates.
In the case of a nonexplicit trust, the person in actual or
constructive possession of the property involved is considered the
trustee and is liable for filing Form 706-GS(T).
If you are filing this return for a nonexplicit trust, see the
instructions for line 1b on page 3.
Separate trusts.
You must treat as separate trusts: (a) portions of a
trust that are attributable to transfers from different transferors;
and (b) substantially separate and independent shares of
different beneficiaries in a trust.
If you are the trustee for separate trusts as described above, you
must file a single Form 706-GS(T) but separate Schedules A for each
separate trust, as that term is used here.
Terminations Subject to GST Tax
A termination may occur by reason of death, lapse of time, release
of a power, or any other means.
In general, all taxable terminations are subject to the
GST tax. A taxable termination is the termination of an interest in
property held in trust unless:
- Immediately after the termination a non-skip person has an
interest in the property, or
- At no time after the termination may a distribution be made
from the trust to a skip person.
Effective Dates
The GST tax is effective for all taxable terminations occurring
after October 22, 1986.
The rules below apply only for purposes of determining if a
transfer is a taxable termination that must be reported on Form
706-GS(T).
Exceptions
Irrevocable Trusts.
Except as described under Additions to irrevocable trusts
below, the GST tax does not apply to any termination of an
interest in a trust that was irrevocable on September 25, 1985. Any
trust in existence on September 25, 1985, will be considered
irrevocable unless:
- On September 25, 1985, the settlor held a power with respect
to such trust that would have caused the value of the trust to be
included in the settlor's gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes
by reason of section 2038 (regarding revocable transfers) if the
settlor had died on September 25, 1985; or
- Regarding a policy of life insurance that is treated as a
trust under section 2652(b), the insured possessed an incident of
ownership on September 25, 1985, that would have caused the insurance
proceeds to be included in the insured's gross estate for Federal
estate tax purposes if the insured had died on September 25,
1985.
For more information, see Regs. section 26.2601-1(b).
Trusts containing qualified terminable interest property.
Irrevocable trusts in existence on September 25, 1985, that hold
qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) (as defined in section
2056(b)(7)) as a result of an election under section 2056(b)(7) or
2523(f), are treated for purposes of the GST tax as if the QTIP
election had not been made. Thus, transfers from such a trust will not
be subject to the GST tax.
Additions to irrevocable trusts.
If an addition has been made after September 25, 1985, to an
irrevocable trust, the termination of any interest in the trust may be
subject in part to the GST tax. Additions include constructive
additions described in Regs. section 26.2601-1(b)(1)(v).
Medical and educational exclusion.
If all of the property to which the termination applied has been
distributed and used for medical or educational expenses of the
transferee such that if the transfer had been made inter vivos by an
individual it would not have been subject to gift tax by reason of the
medical and educational exclusion, then the termination is not a
generation-skipping transfer, and you do not have to file this form to
report the termination.
Transition Rules for Revocable Trusts
The GST tax will not apply to any termination of an interest in a
revocable trust, provided:
- The trust was executed before October 22, 1986;
- The trust as it existed on October 21, 1986, was not amended
after October 21, 1986, in any way that created or increased the
amount of a generation-skipping transfer;
- Except as provided in Exceptions to additions rule
below, no additions were made to the trust; and
- The settlor died before January 1, 1987.
A revocable trust is any trust that on October 22, 1986, was not an
irrevocable trust, as defined above, and would not have been an
irrevocable trust had it been created before September 25, 1985.
The instructions under Trusts containing qualified terminable
interest property above apply also to revocable trusts covered
by these transition rules.
Amendments to revocable trusts.
An amendment to a revocable trust in existence on October 21, 1986,
will not be considered to result in the creation of, or an increase in
the amount of, a generation-skipping transfer where (a) the
amendment is administrative or clarifying in nature, or (b)
it is designed to perfect a marital or charitable deduction for
an existing transfer, and it only incidentally increases the amount
transferred to a skip person. See Regs. section 26.2601-1(b)(2)(vii)
for examples demonstrating these rules.
Additions to revocable trusts.
If an addition (including a constructive addition) to a revocable
trust is made after October 21, 1986, and before the death of the
settlor, all subsequent terminations of interests in the trust will be
subject to the GST tax if the other requirements of taxability are
met. For settlors dying before January 1, 1987, any addition made to a
revocable trust after the death of the settlor will be treated as made
to an irrevocable trust.
Transition Rule in Case of Mental Disability
If the settlor was under a mental disability on October 22, 1986,
the GST tax may not apply. See Regs. section 26.2601-1(b)(3) for a
definition of mental disability and additional details.
Exceptions to Additions Rule
Do not treat as an addition to a trust any addition that is made
pursuant to an instrument or arrangement that is covered by the
transition rules discussed above under Transition Rules for
Revocable Trusts and Transition Rule in Case of Mental
Disability. This also applies to inter vivos transfers if the
same property would have been added to the trust by such an
instrument. For examples illustrating this rule, see Regs. section
26.2601-1(b)(4)(ii).
Skip Persons
For termination purposes, skip person means a trust beneficiary who
is either:
- A natural person assigned to a generation that is two or
more generations below the settlor's generation, or
- A trust that meets either of the following conditions:
- All interests in the trust are held by skip persons,
or
- No person holds an interest in the trust, and at no time
after the transfer to the trust may a distribution be made to a
non-skip person.
Interest
A person holds an interest in the trust if, at the time the
determination is made, the person:
- Has a current right to receive income or corpus from the
trust,
- Is a permissible current recipient of income or corpus from
the trust (other than charitable entities), or
- Is a charitable or other entity described in section 2055(a)
and the trust is a charitable remainder annuity trust, a charitable
remainder unitrust, or a pooled income fund.
Any interest that is created primarily to postpone or avoid the GST
tax is disregarded.
Non-Skip Person
A non-skip person is any person who is not a skip person.
Generation Assignment
A generation is determined along family lines as follows:
- Where the beneficiary is a lineal descendent of a
grandparent of the transferor (e.g., the donor's cousin, niece,
nephew, etc.), the number of generations between the transferor and
the descendent is determined by subtracting the number of generations
between the grandparent and the transferor from the number of
generations between the grandparent and the descendent.
- Where the beneficiary is the lineal descendent of a
grandparent of a spouse (or former spouse) of the transferor, the
number of generations between the transferor and the descendent is
determined by subtracting the number of generations between the
grandparent and the spouse (or former spouse) from the number of
generations between the grandparent and the descendent.
- For this purpose, a relationship by adoption is considered a
blood relationship. A relationship by half-blood is considered a
relationship by whole blood.
- The spouse or former spouse of a transferor or lineal
descendent is considered to belong to the same generation as the
transferor or lineal descendent, as the case may be.
- A person who is not assigned to a generation according to
the rules above is assigned to a generation based on his or her birth
date as follows:
- A person who was born not more than 12½ years
after the transferor is in the transferor's generation;
- A person born more than 12½ years, but not
more than 37½ years, after the transferor is in the
first generation younger than the transferor;
- Similar rules apply for a new generation every 25
years.
If more than one of the rules for assigning generations applies to
a beneficiary, the beneficiary is generally assigned to the youngest
of the generations that apply.
If an entity such as a partnership, corporation, trust, or estate
has an interest in property, each individual who has a beneficial
interest in the entity (e.g., partners, shareholders, and
beneficiaries) is treated as having an interest in the property. The
individual is then assigned to a generation using the rules described
above.
Government entities and certain charitable organizations are
assigned to the transferor's generation. Terminations in their favor
will never be generation- skipping transfers. For more information,
see section 2651(f)(3).
Generation Assignment Where Intervening Parent Is Dead
If you made a gift or bequest to your grandchild and at the time
you made the gift or bequest, the grandchild's parent (who is your or
your spouse's or your former spouse's child) is dead, then for
purposes of generation assignment, your grandchild will be considered
to be your child rather than your grandchild. Your grandchild's
children will be treated as your grandchildren rather than your
greatgrandchildren.
This rule is also applied to your lineal descendants below the
level of grandchild. For example, if your grandchild is dead, your
greatgrandchildren who are lineal descendants of the dead grandchild
are considered your grandchildren for purposes of the GST tax.
Beginning with terminations occurring in 1998, this special rule
that applies to grandchildren of the decedent has been extended to
apply to other lineal descendants.
If property is transferred to an individual who is a descendant of
a parent of the transferor, and that individual's parent (who is a
lineal descendant of the parent of the transferor) is dead at the time
the transfer is subject to gift or estate tax, then for purposes of
generation assignment, the individual is treated as if he or she is a
member of the generation that is one generation below the lower of:
- the transferor's generation, or
- the generation assignment of the youngest living ancestor of
the individual, who is also a descendant of the parent of the
transferor.
The same rules apply to the generation assignment of any descendant
of the individual.
This rule does not apply to a transfer to an individual
who is not a lineal descendant of the transferor if the transferor has
any living lineal descendants.
If any transfer of property to a trust would have been a direct
skip except for this generation assignment rule, then the rule also
applies to transfers from the trust attributable to such property.
Multiple Skips
If after a generation-skipping transfer the property transferred is
held in trust, then for the purpose of determining the taxability of
subsequent transfers from the trust involving that property, the
settlor of the property is assigned to the first generation above the
highest generation of any person who has an interest in the trust
immediately after the initial transfer.
Penalties and Interest
Section 6651 provides for penalties for both late filing and for
late payment unless there is reasonable cause for the delay. The law
also provides penalties for willful attempts to evade payment of tax.
The late filing penalty will not be imposed if the taxpayer can
show that the failure to file a timely return is due to reasonable
cause. Trustees filing late (after the due date, including extensions)
should attach an explanation to the return to show reasonable cause.
Section 6662 provides penalties for underpayments of GST taxes of
$5,000 or more that are attributable to valuation understatements. A
valuation understatement occurs when the value of property reported
on Form 706-GS(T) is 50% or less of the actual value of the property.
Interest will be charged on taxes not paid by their due date, even
if an extension of time to file is granted. Interest is also charged
on any additions to tax imposed by section 6651 from the due date of
the return (including any extensions) until the addition to tax is
paid.
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