One caveat is life insurance trusts. If the person creating the trust retained incidents of ownership in the policy (retaining power to change beneficiaries, canceling or transferring the policy, putting the policy up as collateral for a loan, or borrowing money against the policy’s value), it will be included in the person’s estate-regardless of the irrevocable trust’s ownership. If this is the case, estate taxes may be due, and your inheritance could decrease.

The impact of income taxes also depends on the terms of the irrevocable trust. If the trust terminates at the person’s death and the trust distributes assets to the heirs, your tax basis in those assets will be that of the trust. Make sure you have detailed information from the trustee before making plans to sell those inherited assets.

But if the trust continues beyond the death of the person who created it, then some complex trust tax rules apply. There may be regular distributions that the trust makes to you which will be treated as taxable income. You’ll receive a year-end informational return that shows how much income is taxable and if it’s ordinary income, capital gains, or other specialized types of income.

Every trust is different, so get sound advice from a qualified estate planning attorney. He or she will guide you through the tax issues and make sure you’re in good shape.

Philip J. Kavesh
Nationally recognized attorney helping clients with customized estate planning guidance for over 40 years.
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