schirallicpa Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 An irrevocable trust was established and the apartment house that is normally rented and reported on the Taxpayer's schedule E is now owned by the Trust. Who reports the Schedule E? And if the Taxpayer still gets it, does he get the depreciation on the house? Quote
Terry D EA Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 Even though the trust now owns the rental house, all income and expenses are reported on the individual taxpayer's return on Sch E as normal. Quote
schirallicpa Posted March 6, 2020 Author Report Posted March 6, 2020 That's what I knew from a revocable trust. Wasn't sure if it was the same for irrevocable. Thank you Terry! Quote
grandmabee Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 I don't think that applies for an Irrevocable trust. I think it goes on a 1041 Quote
Lion EA Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 If the apartment house was titled into the trust, the trust reports income, expenses, depreciation, etc. Make changes with the mortgage company, insurance company, etc. 2 Quote
Terry D EA Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 This is interesting, I read an article where the taxes in an irrevocable trust as at the grantor's tax level and not the high level of the trust. Because this trust is irrevocable, I now am leaning toward Lion's answer knowing the trust has to file a tax return. Quote
Lion EA Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 Check that out in the IRCode. Don't trust just any old article. An Irrevocable trust is a separate entity, so I don't think it gets to use the tax rate of the grantor, who is separate from the trust. (Whose rate would you use if a bunch of siblings put an asset into a trust to separate themselves from liability?) That would be true in a Revocable trust that is NOT separate from the grantor and reports on the grantor's income tax return so, of course, uses the grantor's tax rate. But, don't trust me either, because I do very few trusts anymore! Quote
Lion EA Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 Trust Judy! Report on a 1041 at the 1041 rates. 1 Quote
Abby Normal Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 41 minutes ago, Lion EA said: Trust Judy! Report on a 1041 at the 1041 rates. Weren't there any distributions to the beneficiaries? Whose bank account was this all being run through? The trust needs its own bank account, in addition to changing the mortgage, and the title to the trust's name. But if this was all run through the individuals bank account, then all the income has been distributed to the individual. Follow the money! 2 Quote
DANRVAN Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 2 hours ago, schirallicpa said: Who reports Was there a distribution made to the beneficiary during 2019 or with in 65 days after the year end (per the 65 day rule)? 1 Quote
schirallicpa Posted March 6, 2020 Author Report Posted March 6, 2020 I'm not sure who's bank account this was run thru. I suspect the individual. There is a loss on the rental so is a distribution applicable? Quote
Abby Normal Posted March 6, 2020 Report Posted March 6, 2020 1 minute ago, schirallicpa said: I'm not sure who's bank account this was run thru. I suspect the individual. There is a loss on the rental so is a distribution applicable? The distributions will not pass out the loss. The loss will create an NOL inside the trust. Not sure off the top of my head about passive loss rules inside a trust. 1 Quote
DANRVAN Posted March 7, 2020 Report Posted March 7, 2020 19 hours ago, schirallicpa said: There is a loss on the rental so is a distribution applicable? The only time a loss is passed through is in the final year of a trust or estate. However, under current tax code there is no benefit since it is 2% misc deduction. Quote
Abby Normal Posted March 7, 2020 Report Posted March 7, 2020 1 hour ago, DANRVAN said: The only time a loss is passed through is in the final year of a trust or estate. However, under current tax code there is no benefit since it is 2% misc deduction. Capital losses passes out to beneficiaries and are not part of the 2% excess expenses deduction. I've never had a trust with an NOL so I'm not sure if that passes out like capital losses do. Quote
DANRVAN Posted March 7, 2020 Report Posted March 7, 2020 2 hours ago, Abby Normal said: Capital losses passes out to beneficiaries and are not part of the 2% excess expenses deduction. That is correct, they retain their character as capital losses but only pass through in the final year of the trust or estate. The NOLs go into the excess deductions bucket in the final year and are currently not allowed under TCJA. 1 Quote
Burke Posted March 8, 2020 Report Posted March 8, 2020 OP does not disclose whether other assets are in this trust which are income producing, so any rental loss not used to offset other income stays inside the trust and may produce an NOL carryover. What was the purpose here? If the rental is the only thing in the trust, why didn't they do an LLC? Quote
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