The White House recently released its budget proposal for 2016, and one of the major aspects of the plan is to restrict the use and effectiveness of a common estate planning tool: grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs). The administration has proposed limitations on the use of this estate planning technique in the past, but this is the first time that real change may be enacted in the way that people can use GRATs in their estate plan.
What is a GRAT?
A grantor retained annuity trust is an irrevocable trust that is designed to distribute assets from the trust with little to no gift tax attached. In order to properly establish a GRAT, the creator of the trust places assets into the trust that he cannot touch in exchange for receiving a small portion of those funds through annuity payments over a number of years. The distributions are kept just under the federal gift tax limit so that no federal taxes apply to the distributions.