

Giving Away the Farm
How savvy parents make gifts to young children.
April 19, 2007
by Katherine Ohlandt
Most of us are lucky enough to work with clients who are truly interested in passing along some of their good fortune to their families. Let’s review some of the techniques that you can share with these clients when they ask you the age-old question:
How can I give assets to my minor children now, but still make sure that the gifts won’t be wasted or squandered?
This article will review a few tried-and-true ways for a parent to make a gift to a minor child. This article won’t be a review of the rules for qualifying a gift for the gift tax annual exclusion amount, or a review of the current gift and estate tax exclusions and exemptions.
The pros: It’s usually quite easy for a parent to open a custodianship account for a child at the parent’s bank or brokerage firm. An adult is named as the custodian or manager of the account. That person has the power to invest and distribute the account assets. The custodian could be the parent, or any other trusted adult. The assets may be used any time for the benefit of the child, at the discretion of the custodian. The income earned on the account is taxed to the child.
The cons: The gift is irrevocable, and the parent can’t retrieve the gift after it’s made. If the parent is the custodian and dies while the account is in effect, the assets in the account will be included as part of the parent’s taxable estate. And watch out: the account will terminate when the child reaches the age designated on the account, and he or she will receive all of the assets in the account at that time. An 18- or 21-year-old may not be mature enough to deal with the receipt of the assets received from the account.
The pros: The trust has the potential to continue well past a child’s 21st birthday simply by giving the child the demand right to the assets at age 21. The time frame during which the child may exercise the demand right may be limited; for instance, the trust could provide that the child must exercise the right during the 60 days following the child’s 21st birthday, after which the right would expire. Gifts made to a Section 2503(c) Trust while the child is under the age of 21 will generally qualify for the gift tax annual exclusion. In addition, after the child reaches the age of 21 and after the child no longer has any power to demand the withdrawal of the trust assets, the trust assets may be protected from a child’s creditors, including a divorcing spouse.
The cons: The parent will incur legal expenses for the preparation and implementation of the trust, the expense of a gift tax return to report any gift over the annual exclusion amount, and the ongoing expense of an annual income tax return for the trust. The trust is irrevocable after it is created and it may not be modified or amended by the parent. Therefore, the parent should be careful in designing the trust, taking into account a child’s changing circumstances while the trust may be in effect. If the parent designs the trust to last beyond the age of 21 by giving the child a demand right at age 21, there’s always the chance that the child will exercise the power!
The pros: A parent can design a Gift Trust to meet a child’s particular needs, without the need to allow the child access to the trust assets at age 21. Some trusts are designed to make significant distributions to a child upon achieving certain successes in life, such as a college degree, or they may provide assistance for a child to purchase a home or to start a business. The trust can provide income, and principal for a child’s support, for any number of years selected by the parent, or for a child’s lifetime. The trusts can be designed to continue on for the benefit of grandchildren after a child’s death.
The cons: The expense of creating the trust and preparing tax returns is the same as that for the Section 2503(c) Trust. Again, the trust is irrevocable, and cannot be modified or amended by the parent after it is created and implemented. Because the trust is irrevocable, the parent should take time to carefully design the trust for the long-term benefit of the child, and perhaps future grandchildren. Due to the potential length of time that the trust may be in effect, the selection of a trustee is all the more important. The parent should not serve as trustee of a Gift Trust to avoid having the assets included in the parent’s taxable estate at death. Gifts to such a trust will not qualify for the gift tax annual exclusion unless the child is given a power to withdraw the gift soon after it is made to the trust. In addition, if the potential exists that the trust assets will eventually pass to grandchildren or below, then the parent should allocate generation-skipping tax exemption to the gifts as they are added to the trust.
With this information at hand, and with your knowledge about your client’s family, assets and financial situation, you are well equipped to get the conversation started.
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Katherine Ohlandt is a partner in Farella Braun + Martel's Tax and Family Wealth Group, working out of the firm's Wine Country office in St. Helena. Ms. Ohlandt's practice focuses on complex trust and estate matters, including the development and implementation of estate plans, wealth-transfer strategies, business-succession plans and long-range gift plans for families for effective gift and estate tax planning.