A trust was originally written as a complex trust since trustee had discretion to distribute income and principal or add it back into the trust corpus. As a result of litigation, trustee is now required by a settlement agreement to distribute 3% of trust value each year. This means all of the income and principal (if interest does not cover the 3% payout) will be distributed. Does the trust take a $100 or $300 exemption on the 1041?
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" This means all of the income and principal (if interest does not cover the 3% payout) will be distributed."
A trust whose governing instrument requires that all income be distributed currently is allowed a $300 exemption, even if it distributed amounts other than income during the tax year.
See https://www.irs.gov/instructions/i1041/ch02.html#d0e3675 and IRC §642(b)(2)(B)
Since the "governing instrument" now appears to be a settlement agreement that requires all income be distributed currently, the trust should be entitled to the $300 exemption.
" This means all of the income and principal (if interest does not cover the 3% payout) will be distributed."
A trust whose governing instrument requires that all income be distributed currently is allowed a $300 exemption, even if it distributed amounts other than income during the tax year.
See https://www.irs.gov/instructions/i1041/ch02.html#d0e3675 and IRC §642(b)(2)(B)
Since the "governing instrument" now appears to be a settlement agreement that requires all income be distributed currently, the trust should be entitled to the $300 exemption.
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