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Level 4
posted Aug 14, 2021 3:52:29 PM

Conduit Trust

If a Trust is listed as an IRA Beneficiary Conduit Trust only forced to distribute IRA money to the Trust Beneficiaries when it is received but doesn’t have to distribute other NON IRA Trust income immediately? In other words does a Conduit Trust only refer to IRA money which goes into a Trust and not any other money or assets in the Trust?

 
My father has a Trust and I am trying to help him. Unfortunately his lawyer’s tax knowledge seems to be lacking. I am familiar with the new Secure Act where money to some beneficiaries has to be distributed within 10 years. My father wants it to be a Conduit (vs. an Accumulation) Trust where the money received from the IRA to his Trust has to be distributed right away. Currently there is nothing in his Trust to indicate whether it is a Conduit Trust vs. an Accumulation Trust. If my father had his lawyer add a clause like this would it suffice and make it a Conduit Trust?:
 
Trust as an IRA Beneficiary: This is a Conduit Trust and requires that all amounts received from the Grantor’s IRA be distributed to the Trust beneficiaries upon receipt by the Trustee in the following manner:
 
(i) Distribute one half (1/2) of the amount received from the IRA to John Doe. 
 
(ii) Distribute one half (1/2) of the amount received from the IRA to Jane Doe. 
 

0 4 2346
4 Replies
Level 12
Aug 14, 2021 7:59:57 PM

Talk to your lawyer. A simple trust is all you need to pass the income through.

Level 4
Aug 14, 2021 9:11:20 PM

Yes, my father and I set up an appointment with his lawyer. 5 years ago my Dad changed me from a Successor Trustee to a Trustee. In the Retirement Boilerplate section I don’t see any differentiation between Conduit Trust  (I guess Pass Through) vs. a Accumulation Trust. Most of the document is pages and pages of Boilerplate which will take forever to plow through. The current specifics about the beneficiaries don’t mention IRA’s. It’s only recently that I convinced my father to have part of his IRA money go to his Trust through filling out an IRA form to make his Trust a beneficiary. He is not married and lives with his partner and he wants some of his IRA money to pay for her living expenses if he passes away first. He also doesn’t want my sister to get all of the money at once which left her in his IRA. So I suggested to my father do this. You would think his lawyer would have! Originally he was going to have his partner as a direct beneficiary for his IRA but I told him if she passed away her children would get the money. I realize that now because of the Secure Act of 2019 I will have to distribute the IRA money to both my sister and his partner over 10 years rather their remaining lifespan like it used to be. Having it accumulate is a No No because then the Trust would be taxed at 37.5%. I am not an accountant but I am pretty knowledgeable on some of the tax laws and have done my taxes for years. I live in the largest 55 and older community in the world and you would be amazed at some of the bad advice seniors get from lawyers. Some have them create a Trust and they don’t know what the hell is in there and some never even fund a trust which defeats the purpose of it. 

Level 4
Aug 15, 2021 2:59:18 AM

Does Conduit only refer to the IRA income when it is pass thru? In other words, can the other non IRA income be left in the Trust to accumulate?

Alumni
Nov 13, 2023 6:41:58 AM

Whether or not all "Ordinary Income" (interest, dividends, other comparable income - BUT not capital gains) must be distributed is dependent on the language and formation of the Trust.  A simple determination would be if the Trust was formed and files as a "Simple Trust" or "Complex Trust."
In general, a Simple Trust must distribute all Ordinary Income and, except in its terminal year, cannot distribute capital gains. 

A Complex Trust, depending on the language and terms of the Trust itself and the laws of the state in which is a resident, may choose to distribute ordinary, all or some, or retain ordinary income.  Principal and Gain may also be included in the language and terms of the Trust document of a Complex Trust.

 

So read the Trust document and check the prior year Federal Form 1041 to see how the Trust is considered as Simple or Complex.