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Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-113:55
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2006
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
Instructions for Form 1041
and Schedules A, B, D, G, I,
J, and K-1
U.S. Income Tax Return for Estates and Trusts
Section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code unless otherwise noted.
Contents
Page
What’s New . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Photographs of Missing Children . . . . 1
Unresolved Tax Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
How To Get Forms and
Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
General Instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Purpose of Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Income Taxation of Trusts and
Decedents’ Estates . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Abusive Trust Arrangements . . . . . . . . 2
Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Who Must File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Special Filing Instructions for
Grantor Type Trusts, Pooled
Income Funds, and Electing
Small Business Trusts . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Electronic Filing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
When To File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Period Covered . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Who Must Sign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Accounting Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Accounting Periods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Rounding Off to Whole Dollars . . . . . . 8
Estimated Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Interest and Penalties . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Other Forms That May Be
Required . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Assembly and Attachments . . . . . . . . 10
Additional Information . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Of Special Interest to Bankruptcy
Trustees and Debtors-inPossession . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Specific Instructions . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Name of Estate or Trust . . . . . . . . . . 12
Name and Title of Fiduciary . . . . . . . 12
Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
A. Type of Entity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
B. Number of Schedules K-1
Attached . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
C. Employer Identification
Number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
D. Date Entity Created . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E. Nonexempt Charitable and
Split-Interest Trusts . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
F. Initial Return, Amended
Return, Final Return; or
Change in Fiduciary’s Name or
Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
G. Pooled Mortgage Account . . . . . . 14
Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Deductions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Contents
Tax and Payments . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule A — Charitable
Deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule B — Income
Distribution Deduction . . . . . . .
Schedule G — Tax Computation
Other Information . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule I — Alternative
Minimum Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule D (Form 1041) —
Capital Gains and Losses . . . .
Schedule J (Form 1041) —
Accumulation Distribution for
Certain Complex Trusts . . . . . .
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) —
Beneficiary’s Share of Income,
Deductions, Credits, etc. . . . . .
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Where To File . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Page
. . . 19
. . . 21
. . . 21
. . . 23
. . . 25
. . . 26
. . . 32
. . . 39
. . . 41
. . . 46
. . . 48
What’s New
• For tax years beginning in 2006, the
requirement to file a return for a
bankruptcy estate applies only if gross
income is at least $8,450.
• For 2006, qualified disability trusts can
claim an exemption of up to $3,300. A
trust with modified adjusted gross income
above $150,500 loses part of the
exemption deduction. The amount by
which this deduction is reduced for 2006
is only 2/3 of the amount of the reduction
that would otherwise have applied. See
the instructions for line 20 on page 19 for
more details.
• If the entire trust is a widely held fixed
investment trust (WHFIT) that must follow
the WHFIT reporting rules under
Regulations section 1.671-5 for 2007,
check the final return box in item F, on
page 1 of the 2006 Form 1041.
• Estates or trusts that paid the federal
telephone excise tax on long distance or
bundled service may be able to request a
credit. See the instructions for line 24f on
page 20.
Photographs of Missing
Children
The Internal Revenue Service is a proud
partner with the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children.
Photographs of missing children selected
by the Center may appear in instructions
Cat. No. 11372D
on pages that would otherwise be blank.
You can help bring these children home
by looking at the photographs and calling
1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678) if you
recognize a child.
Unresolved Tax Issues
If you have attempted to deal with an IRS
problem unsuccessfully, you should
contact the Taxpayer Advocate. The
Taxpayer Advocate independently
represents the estate’s or trust’s interests
and concerns within the IRS by protecting
its rights and resolving problems that
have not been fixed through normal
channels.
While Taxpayer Advocates cannot
change the tax law or make a technical
tax decision, they can clear up problems
that resulted from previous contacts and
ensure that the estate’s or trust’s case is
given a complete and impartial review.
The estate’s or trust’s assigned
personal advocate will listen to its point of
view and will work with the estate or trust
to address its concerns. The estate or
trust can expect the advocate to provide:
• A “fresh look” at a new or ongoing
problem,
• Timely acknowledgment,
• The name and phone number of the
individual assigned to its case,
• Updates on progress,
• Timeframes for action,
• Speedy resolution, and
• Courteous service.
When contacting the Taxpayer
Advocate, you should provide the
following information.
• The estate’s or trust’s name, address,
and employer identification number.
• The name and telephone number of an
authorized contact person and the hours
he or she can be reached.
• The type of tax return and year(s)
involved.
• A detailed description of the problem.
• Previous attempts to solve the problem
and the office that had been contacted.
• A description of the hardship the estate
or trust is facing and verifying
documentation (if applicable).
The estate or trust may contact a
Taxpayer Advocate by calling
1-877-777-4778 (toll-free). Persons who
have access to TTY/TDD equipment may
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call 1-800-829-4059 and ask for Taxpayer
Advocate assistance. If the estate or trust
prefers, it may call, write, or fax the
Taxpayer Advocate office in its area. See
Pub. 1546, The Taxpayer Advocate
Service of the IRS, for a list of addresses
and fax numbers.
• Any income tax liability of the estate or
trust; and
• Employment taxes on wages paid to
household employees.
How To Get Forms and
Publications
A trust (except a grantor type trust) or a
decedent’s estate is a separate legal
entity for federal tax purposes. A
decedent’s estate comes into existence at
the time of death of an individual. A trust
may be created during an individual’s life
(inter vivos) or at the time of his or her
death under a will (testamentary). If the
trust instrument contains certain
provisions, then the person creating the
trust (the grantor) is treated as the
owner of the trust’s assets. Such a trust is
a grantor type trust. See page 5 for
special rules for grantor trusts.
Internet
You can access the IRS website 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week at www.irs.gov to:
• Download forms, instructions, and
publications;
• Order IRS products online;
• Research your tax questions online;
• Search publications online by topic or
keyword;
• View Internal Revenue Bulletins (IRBs)
published in the last few years; and
• Sign up to receive local and national
tax news by email.
IRS Tax Products CD
You can order Publication 1796, IRS Tax
Products CD, and get:
• Current-year forms, instructions, and
publications.
• Prior-year forms, instructions, and
publications.
• Bonus: Historical Tax Products DVD —
Ships with the final release.
• Tax Map: an electronic research tool
and finding aid.
• Tax Law frequently asked questions
(FAQs).
• Tax Topics from the IRS telephone
response system.
• Fill-in, print, and save features for most
tax forms.
• Internal Revenue Bulletins.
• Toll-free and email technical support.
The CD is released twice during the
year. The first release will ship the
beginning of January and the final release
will ship the beginning of March. Buy the
CD from National Technical Information
Service at www.irs.gov/cdorders for $35
(no handling fee) or call
1-877-CDFORMS (1-877-233-6767)
toll-free to buy the CD for $35 (plus a $5
handling fee).
By Phone and in Person
You can order forms and publications by
calling 1-800-TAX-FORM
(1-800-829-3676). You can also get most
forms and publications at your local IRS
office.
General Instructions
Purpose of Form
The fiduciary of a domestic decedent’s
estate, trust, or bankruptcy estate uses
Form 1041 to report:
• The income, deductions, gains, losses,
etc. of the estate or trust;
• The income that is either accumulated
or held for future distribution or distributed
currently to the beneficiaries;
Income Taxation of Trusts
and Decedents’ Estates
A trust or decedent’s estate figures its
gross income in much the same manner
as an individual. Most deductions and
credits allowed to individuals are also
allowed to estates and trusts. However,
there is one major distinction. A trust or
decedent’s estate is allowed an income
distribution deduction for distributions to
beneficiaries. To figure this deduction, the
fiduciary must complete Schedule B. The
income distribution deduction determines
the amount of any distributions taxed to
the beneficiaries.
For this reason, a trust or decedent’s
estate sometimes is referred to as a
“pass-through” entity. The beneficiary,
and not the trust or decedent’s estate,
pays income tax on his or her distributive
share of income. Schedule K-1 (Form
1041) is used to notify the beneficiaries of
the amounts to be included on their
income tax returns.
Before preparing Form 1041, the
fiduciary must figure the accounting
income of the estate or trust under the will
or trust instrument and applicable local
law to determine the amount, if any, of
income that is required to be distributed,
because the income distribution
deduction is based, in part, on that
amount.
Abusive Trust
Arrangements
Certain trust arrangements purport to
reduce or eliminate federal taxes in ways
that are not permitted under the law.
Abusive trust arrangements typically are
promoted by the promise of tax benefits
with no meaningful change in the
taxpayer’s control over or benefit from the
taxpayer’s income or assets. The
promised benefits may include reduction
or elimination of income subject to tax;
deductions for personal expenses paid by
the trust; depreciation deductions of an
owner’s personal residence and
furnishings; a stepped-up basis for
property transferred to the trust; the
reduction or elimination of
self-employment taxes; and the reduction
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or elimination of gift and estate taxes.
These promised benefits are inconsistent
with the tax rules applicable to trust
arrangements.
Abusive trust arrangements often use
trusts to hide the true ownership of assets
and income or to disguise the substance
of transactions. These arrangements
frequently involve more than one trust,
each holding different assets of the
taxpayer (for example, the taxpayer’s
business, business equipment, home,
automobile, etc.). Some trusts may hold
interests in other trusts, purport to involve
charities, or are foreign trusts. Funds may
flow from one trust to another trust by way
of rental agreements, fees for services,
purchase agreements, and distributions.
Some of the abusive trust
arrangements that have been identified
include unincorporated business trusts (or
organizations), equipment or service
trusts, family residence trusts, charitable
trusts, and final trusts. In each of these
trusts, the original owner of the assets
that are nominally subject to the trust
effectively retains the authority to cause
financial benefits of the trust to be directly
or indirectly returned or made available to
the owner. For example, the trustee may
be the promoter, or a relative or friend of
the owner who simply carries out the
directions of the owner whether or not
permitted by the terms of the trust.
When trusts are used for legitimate
business, family, or estate planning
purposes, either the trust, the beneficiary,
or the transferor to the trust will pay the
tax on income generated by the trust
property. Trusts cannot be used to
transform a taxpayer’s personal, living, or
educational expenses into deductible
items, and cannot seek to avoid tax
liability by ignoring either the true
ownership of income and assets or the
true substance of transactions. Therefore,
the tax results promised by the promoters
of abusive trust arrangements are not
allowable under the law, and the
participants in and promoters of these
arrangements may be subject to civil or
criminal penalties in appropriate cases.
For more details, including the legal
principles that control the proper tax
treatment of these abusive trust
arrangements, see Notice 97-24, 1997-1
C.B. 409.
For additional information about
abusive tax arrangements, visit the IRS
website at www.irs.gov and type in the
keyword “Scams” in the search box.
Definitions
Beneficiary
A beneficiary includes an heir, a legatee,
or a devisee.
Distributable Net Income (DNI)
The income distribution deduction
allowable to estates and trusts for
amounts paid, credited, or required to be
distributed to beneficiaries is limited to
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distributable net income (DNI). This
amount, which is figured on Schedule B,
line 7, is also used to determine how
much of an amount paid, credited, or
required to be distributed to a beneficiary
will be includible in his or her gross
income.
Income, Deductions, and
Credits in Respect of a
Decedent
Income. When completing Form 1041,
you must take into account any items that
are income in respect of a decedent
(IRD).
In general, IRD is income that a
decedent was entitled to receive but that
was not properly includible in the
decedent’s final income tax return under
the decedent’s method of accounting.
IRD includes:
• All accrued income of a decedent who
reported his or her income on the cash
method of accounting,
• Income accrued solely because of the
decedent’s death in the case of a
decedent who reported his or her income
on the accrual method of accounting, and
• Income to which the decedent had a
contingent claim at the time of his or her
death.
Some examples of IRD for a decedent
who kept his or her books on the cash
method are:
• Deferred salary payments that are
payable to the decedent’s estate,
• Uncollected interest on U.S. savings
bonds,
• Proceeds from the completed sale of
farm produce, and
• The portion of a lump-sum distribution
to the beneficiary of a decedent’s IRA that
equals the balance in the IRA at the time
of the owner’s death. This includes
unrealized appreciation and income
accrued to that date, less the aggregate
amount of the owner’s nondeductible
contributions to the IRA. Such amounts
are included in the beneficiary’s gross
income in the tax year that the distribution
is received.
The IRD has the same character it
would have had if the decedent lived and
received such amount.
Deductions and credits. The following
deductions and credits, when paid by the
decedent’s estate, are allowed on Form
1041 even though they were not
allowable on the decedent’s final income
tax return.
• Business expenses deductible under
section 162.
• Interest deductible under section 163.
• Taxes deductible under section 164.
• Investment expenses described in
section 212 (in excess of 2% of AGI).
• Percentage depletion allowed under
section 611.
• Foreign tax credit.
For more information, see section 691
or Income in Respect of a Decedent in
Pub. 559, Survivors, Executors, and
Administrators.
Income Required To Be
Distributed Currently
Income required to be distributed
currently is income that is required under
the terms of the governing instrument and
applicable local law to be distributed in
the year it is received. The fiduciary must
be under a duty to distribute the income
currently, even if the actual distribution is
not made until after the close of the trust’s
tax year. See Regulations section
1.651(a)-2.
Fiduciary
A fiduciary is a trustee of a trust; or an
executor, executrix, administrator,
administratrix, personal representative, or
person in possession of property of a
decedent’s estate.
Note. Any reference in these instructions
to “you” means the fiduciary of the estate
or trust.
Trust
A trust is an arrangement created either
by a will or by an inter vivos declaration
by which trustees take title to property for
the purpose of protecting or conserving it
for the beneficiaries under the ordinary
rules applied in chancery or probate
courts.
Who Must File
Decedent’s Estate
The fiduciary(or one of the joint
fiduciaries) must file Form 1041 for a
domestic estate that has:
1. Gross income for the tax year of
$600 or more, or
2. A beneficiary who is a nonresident
alien.
An estate is a domestic estate if it is
not a foreign estate. A foreign estate is
one the income of which, from sources
outside the United States that is not
effectively connected with the conduct of
a U.S. trade or business, is not includible
in gross income. If you are the fiduciary of
a foreign estate, file Form 1040NR, U.S.
Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return,
instead of Form 1041.
Trust
The fiduciary (or one of the joint
fiduciaries) must file Form 1041 for a
domestic trust taxable under section 641
that has:
1. Any taxable income for the tax
year,
2. Gross income of $600 or more
(regardless of taxable income), or
3. A beneficiary who is a nonresident
alien.
Two or more trusts are treated as one
trust if such trusts have substantially the
same grantor(s) and substantially the
same primary beneficiary(ies) and a
principal purpose of such trusts is
avoidance of tax. This provision applies
only to that portion of the trust that is
-3-
attributable to contributions to corpus
made after March 1, 1984.
A trust is a domestic trust if:
• A U.S. court is able to exercise primary
supervision over the administration of the
trust (court test), and
• One or more U.S. persons have the
authority to control all substantial
decisions of the trust (control test).
See Regulations section 301.7701-7
for more information on the court and
control tests.
Also treated as a domestic trust is a
trust (other than a trust treated as wholly
owned by the grantor) that:
• Was in existence on August 20, 1996,
• Was treated as a domestic trust on
August 19, 1996, and
• Elected to continue to be treated as a
domestic trust.
A trust that is not a domestic trust is
treated as a foreign trust. If you are the
trustee of a foreign trust, file Form
1040NR instead of Form 1041. Also, a
foreign trust with a U.S. owner generally
must file Form 3520-A, Annual
Information Return of Foreign Trust With
a U.S. Owner.
If a domestic trust becomes a foreign
trust, it is treated under section 684 as
having transferred all of its assets to a
foreign trust, except to the extent a
grantor or another person is treated as
the owner of the trust when the trust
becomes a foreign trust.
Special Rule for Certain
Revocable Trusts
Section 645 provides that if both the
executor (if any) of an estate (the related
estate) and the trustee of a qualified
revocable trust (QRT) elect the treatment
in section 645, the trust shall be treated
and taxed as part of the related estate
during the election period. This election
may be made by a QRT even if no
executor is appointed for the related
estate.
In general, Form 8855, Election To
Treat a Qualified Revocable Trust as Part
of an Estate, must be filed by the due
date for Form 1041 for the first tax year of
the related estate. This applies even if the
combined related estate and electing trust
do not have sufficient income to be
required to file Form 1041. However, if
the estate is granted an extension of time
to file Form 1041 for its first tax year, the
due date for Form 8855 is the extended
due date.
Once made, the election is irrevocable.
Qualified revocable trusts. In general, a
QRT is any trust (or part of a trust) that,
on the day the decedent died, was treated
as owned by the decedent because the
decedent held the power to revoke the
trust as described in section 676. An
electing trust is a QRT for which a section
645 election has been made.
Election period. The election period is
the period of time during which an
electing trust is treated as part of its
related estate.
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The election period begins on the date
of the decedent’s death and terminates
on the earlier of:
• The day on which the electing trust and
related estate, if any, distribute all of their
assets, or
• The day before the applicable date.
To determine the applicable date, first
determine whether a Form 706, United
States Estate (and Generation-Skipping
Transfer) Tax Return, is required to be
filed as a result of the decedent’s death. If
no Form 706 is required to be filed, the
applicable date is 2 years after the date of
the decedent’s death. If Form 706 is
required, the applicable date is the later of
2 years after the date of the decedent’s
death or 6 months after the final
determination of liability for estate tax. For
additional information, see Regulations
section 1.645-1(f).
Taxpayer identification number. All
QRTs must obtain a new taxpayer
identification number (TIN) following the
death of the decedent whether or not a
section 645 election is made. (Use Form
W-9, Request for Taxpayer Identification
Number and Certification, to notify payers
of the new TIN.)
An electing trust that continues after
the termination of the election period does
not need to obtain a new TIN following
the termination unless:
• An executor was appointed and agreed
to the election after the electing trust
made a valid section 645 election, and
the electing trust had filed a return as an
estate under the trust’s TIN, or
• No executor was appointed and the
QRT was the filing trust (as explained
later).
A related estate that continues after
the termination of the election period does
not need to obtain a new TIN.
For more information about TINs,
including trusts with multiple owners, see
Regulations sections 1.645-1 and
301.6109-1(a).
General procedures for completing
Form 1041 during the election period.
If there is an executor. The following
rules apply to filing Form 1041 while the
election is in effect.
• The executor of the related estate is
responsible for filing Form 1041 for the
estate and all electing trusts. The return is
filed under the name and TIN of the
related estate. Be sure and check the
Decedent’s estate box at the top of Form
1041. The executor continues to file Form
1041 during the election period even if the
estate distributes all of its assets before
the end of the election period.
• The Form 1041 includes all items of
income, deduction, and credit for the
estate and all electing trusts.
• The executor must attach a statement
to Form 1041 providing the following
information for each electing trust: (a) the
name of the electing trust, (b) the TIN of
the electing trust, and (c) the name and
address of the trustee of the electing
trust.
• The related estate and the electing
trust are treated as separate shares for
purposes of computing distributable net
income and applying distribution
provisions. Also, each of those shares
can contain two or more separate shares.
For more information, see Separate share
rule on page 21 and Regulations section
1.645-1(e)(2)(iii).
• The executor is responsible for insuring
that the estate’s share of the combined
tax obligation is paid.
For additional information, including
treatment of transfers between shares
and charitable contribution deductions,
see Regulations section 1.645-1(e).
If there is no executor. If no
executor has been appointed for the
related estate, the trustee of the electing
trust files Form 1041 as if it was an
estate. File using the TIN that the QRT
obtained after the death of the decedent.
The trustee can choose a fiscal year as
the trust’s tax year during the election
period. Be sure to check the Decedent’s
estate box at the top of page 1 during the
election period. The electing trust is
entitled to a single $600 personal
exemption on returns filed for the election
period.
If there is more than one electing trust,
the trusts must appoint one trustee as the
filing trustee. Form 1041 is filed under the
name and TIN of the filing trustee’s trust.
A statement providing the same
information regarding the electing trusts
(except the filing trust) that is listed under
If there is an executor above must be
attached to these Forms 1041. All
electing trusts must choose the same tax
year.
If there is more than one electing trust,
the filing trustee is responsible for
insuring that the filing trust’s share of the
combined tax liability is paid.
For additional information on filing
requirements when there is no executor,
including application of the separate
share rule, see Regulations section
1.645-1(e). For information on the
requirements when an executor is
appointed after an election is made and
the executor does not agree to the
election, see below.
Responsibilities of the trustee when
there is an executor (or there is no
executor and the trustee is not the
filing trustee). When there is an
executor (or there is no executor and the
trustee is not the filing trustee), the
trustee of an electing trust is responsible
for the following during the election
period.
• To timely provide the executor with all
the trust information necessary to allow
the executor to file a complete, accurate,
and timely Form 1041.
• To insure that the electing trust’s share
of the combined tax liability is paid.
The trustee does not file a Form 1041
during the election period (except for a
final return if the trust terminates during
the election period as explained later).
-4-
Procedures for completing Form 1041
for the year in which the election
terminates.
If there is an executor. If there is an
executor, the Form 1041 filed under the
name and TIN of the related estate for the
tax year in which the election terminates
includes (a) the items of income,
deduction, and credit for the related
estate for its entire tax year, and (b) the
income, deductions, and credits for the
electing trust for the period that ends with
the last day of the election period. If the
estate will not continue after the close of
the tax year, indicate that this Form 1041
is a final return.
At the end of the last day of the
election period, the combined entity is
deemed to distribute the share comprising
the electing trust to a new trust. All items
of income, including net capital gains, that
are attributable to the share comprising
the electing trust are included in the
calculation of distributable net income of
the electing trust and treated as
distributed. The distribution rules of
sections 661 and 662 apply to this
deemed distribution. The combined entity
is entitled to an income distribution
deduction for this deemed distribution,
and the ‘‘new’’ trust must include its share
of the distribution in its income. See
Regulations sections 1.645-1(e)(2)(iii) and
1.645-1(h) for more information.
If the electing trust continues in
existence after the termination of the
election period, the trustee must file Form
1041 under the name and TIN of the trust,
using the calendar year as its accounting
period, if it is otherwise required to file.
If there is no executor. If there is no
executor, the following rules apply to filing
Form 1041 for the tax year in which the
election period ends.
• The tax year of the electing trust closes
on the last day of the election period, and
the Form 1041 filed for that tax year
includes all items of income, deduction,
and credit for the electing trust for the
period beginning with the first day of the
tax year and ending with the last day of
the election period.
• The deemed distribution rules
discussed above apply.
• Check the box to indicate that this
Form 1041 is a final return.
• If the filing trust continues after the
termination of the election period, the
trustee must obtain a new TIN. If the trust
meets the filing requirements, the trustee
must file a Form 1041 under the new TIN
for the period beginning with the day after
the close of the election period and, in
general, ending December 31 of that
year.
Responsibilities of the trustee when
there is an executor (or there is no
executor and the trustee is not the
filing trustee). In addition to the
requirements listed above under this
same heading, the trustee is responsible
for the following.
• If the trust will not continue after the
close of the election period, the trustee
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must file a Form 1041 under the name
and TIN of the trust. Complete the entity
information and items A, C, D, and F.
Indicate in item F that this is a final return.
Do not report any items of income,
deduction, or credit.
• If the trust will continue after the close
of the election period, the trustee must file
a Form 1041 for the trust for the tax year
beginning the day after the close of the
election period and, in general, ending
December 31 of that year. Use the TIN
obtained after the decedent’s death.
Follow the general rules for completing
the return.
Special filing instructions.
When the election is not made by
the due date of the QRT’s Form 1041.
If the section 645 election has not been
made by the time the QRT’s first income
tax return would be due for the tax year
beginning with the decedent’s death, but
the trustee and executor (if any) have
decided to make a section 645 election,
then the QRT is not required to file a
Form 1041 for the short tax year
beginning with the decedent’s death and
ending on December 31 of that year.
However, if a valid election is not
subsequently made, the QRT may be
subject to penalties and interest for failure
to file and failure to pay.
If the QRT files a Form 1041 for this
short period, and a valid section 645
election is subsequently made, then the
trustee must file an amended Form 1041
for the electing trust, excluding all items of
income, deduction, and credit of the
electing trust. These amounts are then
included on the first Form 1041 filed by
the executor for the related estate (or the
filing trustee for the electing trust filing as
an estate).
Later appointed executor. If an
executor for the related estate is not
appointed until after the trustee has made
a valid section 645 election, the executor
must agree to the trustee’s election and
they must file a revised Form 8855 within
90 days of the appointment of the
executor. If the executor does not agree
to the election, the election terminates as
of the date of appointment of the
executor.
If the executor agrees to the election,
the trustee must amend any Form 1041
filed under the name and TIN of the
electing trust for the period beginning with
the decedent’s death. The amended
returns are still filed under the name and
TIN of the electing trust, and they must
include the items of income, deduction,
and credit for the related estate for the
periods covered by the returns. Also,
attach a statement to the amended Forms
1041 identifying the name and TIN of the
related estate, and the name and address
of the executor. Check the Final return
box on the amended return for the tax
year that ends with the appointment of the
executor. Except for this amended return,
all returns filed for the combined entity
after the appointment of the executor
must be filed under the name and TIN of
the related estate.
If the election terminates as the result
of a later appointed executor, the
executor of the related estate must file
Forms 1041 under the name and TIN of
the related estate for all tax years of the
related estate beginning with the
decedent’s death. The election period and
the tax year terminate with respect to the
electing trust the day before the
appointment of the executor. The trustee
is not required to amend any of the
returns filed by the electing trust for the
period prior to the appointment of the
executor. The trust must file a final Form
1041 following the instructions above for
completing Form 1041 in the year in
which the election terminates and there is
no executor.
Termination of the trust during the
election period. If an electing trust
terminates during the election period, the
trustee of that trust must file a final Form
1041 by completing the entity information
(using the trust’s EIN), checking the Final
return box, and signing and dating the
form. Do not report items of income,
deduction, and credit. These items are
reported on the related estate’s return.
Alaska Native Settlement Trusts
The trustee of an Alaska Native
Settlement Trust may elect the special tax
treatment for the trust and its
beneficiaries provided for in section 646.
The election must be made by the due
date (including extensions) for filing the
trust’s tax return for its first tax year
ending after June 7, 2001. Do not use
Form 1041. Use Form 1041-N, U.S.
Income Tax Return for Electing Alaska
Native Settlement Trusts, to make the
election. Additionally, Form 1041-N is the
trust’s income tax return and satisfies the
section 6039H information reporting
requirement for the trust.
Bankruptcy Estate
The bankruptcy trustee or debtor-inpossession must file Form 1041 for the
estate of an individual involved in
bankruptcy proceedings under chapter 7
or 11 of title 11 of the United States Code
if the estate has gross income for the tax
year of $8,450 or more. See Of Special
Interest To Bankruptcy Trustees and
Debtors-in-Possession on page 11 for
details.
Special election. If a QSF has only 1
transferor, the transferor may elect to
treat the QSF as a grantor type trust.
To make the grantor trust election, the
transferor must attach an election
statement to a timely filed Form 1041,
including extensions, that the
administrator files for the QSF for the tax
year in which the settlement fund is
established. If Form 1041 is not filed
because Optional Method 1 or 2 was
chosen, attach the election statement to a
timely filed income tax return, including
extensions, of the transferor for the tax
year in which the settlement fund is
established.
Transition rule. A transferor can
make a grantor trust election for a QSF
that was established by February 3, 2006,
if the applicable period for filing an
amended return has not expired for both
the QSF’s first tax year and all later tax
years and the same tax years of the
transferor. A grantor trust election under
this paragraph requires that the returns of
the QSF and the transferor for all affected
tax years are consistent with the grantor
trust election. This requirement may be
satisfied by timely filed original returns or
amended returns filed before the
applicable period of limitations expires.
For information about QSFs established
by the U.S. government by February 3,
2006, see Regulations section
1.468B-5(c)(3).
Election statement. The election
statement may be made separately or, if
filed with Form 1041, on the attachment
described under Grantor Type Trusts. At
the top of the election statement, write
“Section 1.468B-1(k) Election” and
include the transferor’s:
• Name,
• Address,
• Taxpayer identification number, and
• A statement that he or she will treat the
qualified settlement fund as a grantor type
trust.
Special Filing Instructions
for Grantor Type Trusts,
Pooled Income Funds, and
Electing Small Business
Trusts
Common Trust Funds
Grantor Type Trusts
Do not file Form 1041 for a common trust
fund maintained by a bank. Instead, the
fund may use Form 1065, U.S. Return of
Partnership Income, for its return. For
more details, see section 584 and
Regulations section 1.6032-1.
A trust is a grantor trust if the grantor
retains certain powers or ownership
benefits. This can also apply to only a
portion of a trust. See Grantor Type Trust
on page 13 for details on what makes a
trust a grantor trust.
Qualified Settlement Funds
In general, a grantor trust is ignored for
tax purposes and all of the income,
deductions, etc., are treated as belonging
directly to the grantor. This also applies to
any portion of a trust that is treated as a
grantor trust.
The trustee of a designated or qualified
settlement fund (QSF) generally must file
Form 1120-SF, U.S. Income Tax Return
for Settlement Funds, instead of Form
1041.
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The following instructions apply
only to grantor type trusts that are
CAUTION not using an optional filing
method.
File Form 1041 for a grantor trust
unless you use an optional filing method.
If the entire trust is a grantor trust, fill in
only the entity portion of Form 1041. Do
not show any dollar amounts on the form,
itself; show dollar amounts only on an
attachment to the form. Do not use
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) as the
attachment.
If only part of the trust is treated as a
grantor trust, report on Form 1041 only
the part of the income, deductions, etc.,
that is taxable to the trust. The amounts
that are taxable directly to the grantor are
shown only on an attachment to the form.
Do not use Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) as
the attachment.
Also, the fiduciary must give the
grantor (owner) of the trust a copy of the
attachment.
On the attachment, report:
• The name, identifying number, and
address of the person(s) to whom the
income is taxable;
• The income of the trust that is taxable
to the grantor or another person under
sections 671 through 678. Report the
income in the same detail as it would be
reported on the grantor’s return had it
been received directly by the grantor; and
• Any deductions or credits that apply to
this income. Report these deductions and
credits in the same detail as they would
be reported on the grantor’s return had
they been received directly by the grantor.
The income taxable to the grantor or
another person under sections 671
through 678 and the deductions and
credits that apply to that income must be
reported by that person on their own
income tax return.
Example. The John Doe Trust is a
grantor type trust. During the year, the
trust sold 100 shares of ABC stock for
$1,010 in which it had a basis of $10 and
200 shares of XYZ stock for $10 in which
it had a $1,020 basis.
The trust does not report these
transactions on Form 1041. Instead, a
schedule is attached to the Form 1041
showing each stock transaction
separately and in the same detail as John
Doe (grantor and owner) will need to
report these transactions on his Schedule
D (Form 1040). The trust may not net the
capital gains and losses, nor may it issue
John Doe a Schedule K-1 (Form 1041)
showing a $10 long-term capital loss.
!
Optional Filing Methods for Certain
Grantor Type Trusts
Generally, if a trust is treated as owned
by one grantor or other person, the
trustee may choose Optional Method 1 or
Optional Method 2 as the trust’s method
of reporting instead of filing Form 1041. A
husband and wife will be treated as one
grantor for purposes of these two optional
methods if:
• All of the trust is treated as owned by
the husband and wife, and
• The husband and wife file their income
tax return jointly for that tax year.
Generally, if a trust is treated as
owned by two or more grantors or other
persons, the trustee may choose Optional
Method 3 as the trust’s method of
reporting instead of filing Form 1041.
Once you choose the trust’s filing
method, you must follow the rules under
Changing filing methods if you want to
change to another method.
Exceptions. The following trusts cannot
report using the optional filing methods.
• A common trust fund (as defined in
section 584(a)).
• A foreign trust or a trust that has any of
its assets located outside the United
States.
• A qualified subchapter S trust (as
defined in section 1361(d)(3)).
• A trust all of which is treated as owned
by one grantor or one other person whose
tax year is other than a calendar year.
• A trust all of which is treated as owned
by one or more grantors or other persons,
one of which is not a U.S. person.
• A trust all of which is treated as owned
by one or more grantors or other persons
if at least one grantor or other person is
an exempt recipient for information
reporting purposes, unless at least one
grantor or other person is not an exempt
recipient and the trustee reports without
treating any of the grantors or other
persons as exempt recipients.
Optional Method 1. For a trust treated
as owned by one grantor or by one other
person, the trustee must give all payers of
income during the tax year the name and
taxpayer identification number (TIN) of
the grantor or other person treated as the
owner of the trust and the address of the
trust. This method may be used only if the
owner of the trust provides the trustee
with a signed Form W-9, Request for
Taxpayer Identification Number and
Certification. In addition, unless the
grantor or other person treated as owner
of the trust is the trustee or a co-trustee of
the trust, the trustee must give the grantor
or other person treated as owner of the
trust a statement that:
• Shows all items of income, deduction,
and credit of the trust;
• Identifies the payer of each item of
income;
• Explains how the grantor or other
person treated as owner of the trust takes
those items into account when figuring
the grantor’s or other person’s taxable
income or tax; and
• Informs the grantor or other person
treated as the owner of the trust that
those items must be included when
figuring taxable income and credits on his
or her income tax return.
Grantor trusts that have not
TIP applied for an EIN and are going
to file under Optional Method 1 do
not need an EIN for the trust as long as
they continue to report under that method.
-6-
Optional Method 2. For a trust treated
as owned by one grantor or by one other
person, the trustee must give all payers of
income during the tax year the name,
address, and TIN of the trust. The trustee
also must file with the IRS the appropriate
Forms 1099 to report the income or gross
proceeds paid to the trust during the tax
year that shows the trust as the payer and
the grantor, or other person treated as
owner, as the payee. The trustee must
report each type of income in the
aggregate and each item of gross
proceeds separately. The due date for
any Forms 1099 required to be filed with
the IRS by a trustee under this method is
February 28, 2007 (April 2, 2007 if filed
electronically).
In addition, unless the grantor, or other
person treated as owner of the trust is the
trustee or a co-trustee of the trust, the
trustee must give the grantor or other
person treated as owner of the trust a
statement that:
• Shows all items of income, deduction,
and credit of the trust;
• Explains how the grantor or other
person treated as owner of the trust takes
those items into account when figuring
the grantor’s or other person’s taxable
income or tax; and
• Informs the grantor or other person
treated as the owner of the trust that
those items must be included when
figuring taxable income and credits on his
or her income tax return. This statement
satisfies the requirement to give the
recipient copies of the Forms 1099 filed
by the trustee.
Optional Method 3. For a trust treated
as owned by two or more grantors or
other persons, the trustee must give all
payers of income during the tax year the
name, address, and TIN of the trust. The
trustee also must file with the IRS the
appropriate Forms 1099 to report the
income or gross proceeds paid to the
trust by all payers during the tax year
attributable to the part of the trust treated
as owned by each grantor, or other
person, showing the trust as the payer
and each grantor, or other person treated
as owner of the trust, as the payee. The
trustee must report each type of income
in the aggregate and each item of gross
proceeds separately. The due date for
any Forms 1099 required to be filed with
the IRS by a trustee under this method is
February 28, 2007 (April 2, 2007, if filed
electronically).
In addition, the trustee must give each
grantor or other person treated as owner
of the trust a statement that:
• Shows all items of income, deduction,
and credit of the trust attributable to the
part of the trust treated as owned by the
grantor or other person;
• Explains how the grantor or other
person treated as owner of the trust takes
those items into account when figuring
the grantor’s or other person’s taxable
income or tax; and
• Informs the grantor or other person
treated as the owner of the trust that
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those items must be included when
figuring taxable income and credits on his
or her income tax return. This statement
satisfies the requirement to give the
recipient copies of the Forms 1099 filed
by the trustee.
Changing filing methods. A trustee who
previously had filed Form 1041 can
change to one of the optional methods by
filing a final Form 1041 for the tax year
that immediately precedes the first tax
year for which the trustee elects to report
under one of the optional methods. On
the front of the final Form 1041, the
trustee must write “Pursuant to section
1.671-4(g), this is the final Form 1041 for
this grantor trust,” and check the “Final
return” box in item F.
For more details on changing reporting
methods, including changes from one
optional method to another, see
Regulations section 1.671-4(g).
Backup withholding. The following
grantor trusts are treated as payors for
purposes of backup withholding.
1. A trust established after 1995, all of
which is owned by 2 or more grantors
(treating spouses filing a joint return as 1
grantor).
2. A trust with 10 or more grantors
established after 1983 but before
1996.
The trustee must withhold 28% of
reportable payments made to any grantor
who is subject to backup withholding.
For more information, see section
3406 and its regulations.
Pooled Income Funds
If you are filing for a pooled income fund,
attach a statement to support the
following:
• The calculation of the yearly rate of
return,
• The computation of the deduction for
distributions to the beneficiaries, and
• The computation of any charitable
deduction.
You do not have to complete
Schedules A or B of Form 1041.
If the fund has accumulations of
income, file Form 1041-A unless the fund
is required to distribute all of its net
income to beneficiaries currently.
You must also file Form 5227,
Split-Interest Trust Information Return, for
the pooled income fund.
Electing Small Business Trusts
Special rules apply when figuring the tax
on the S portion of an electing small
business trust (ESBT). The S portion of
an ESBT is the portion of the trust that
consists of stock in one or more S
corporations and is not treated as a
grantor type trust. The tax on the S
portion:
• Must be figured separately from the tax
on the remainder of the ESBT (if any) and
attached to the return,
• Is entered to the left of the Schedule G,
line 7, entry space preceded by “Sec.
641(c),” and
• Is included in the total tax on Schedule
G, line 7.
The tax on the remainder (non-S
portion) of the ESBT is figured in the
normal manner on Form 1041.
Tax computation attachment. Attach to
the return the tax computation for the S
portion of the ESBT.
To compute the tax on the S portion:
• Treat that portion of the ESBT as if it
were a separate trust;
• Include only the income, losses,
deductions, and credits allocated to the
ESBT as an S corporation shareholder
and gain or loss from the disposition of S
corporation stock;
• Aggregate items of income, losses,
deductions, and credits allocated to the
ESBT as an S corporation shareholder if
the S portion of the ESBT has stock in
more than one S corporation;
• Deduct state and local income taxes
and administrative expenses directly
related to the S portion or allocated to the
S portion if the allocation is reasonable in
light of all the circumstances;
• Do not claim a deduction for capital
losses in excess of capital gains;
• Do not claim an income distribution
deduction or an exemption amount;
• Do not deduct interest on money
borrowed by the trust to buy S corporation
stock;
• Do not claim an exemption amount in
figuring the alternative minimum tax; and
• Do not use the tax rate schedule to
figure the tax. The tax is 35% of the S
portion’s taxable income except in figuring
the maximum tax on qualified dividends
and capital gains.
For additional information, see
Regulations section 1.641(c)-1.
Other information. When figuring the
tax and DNI on the remaining (non-S)
portion of the trust, disregard the S
corporation items.
Do not apportion to the beneficiaries
any of the S corporation items.
If the ESBT consists entirely of stock in
one or more S corporations, do not make
any entries on lines 1 – 22 of page 1.
Instead:
• Complete the entity portion;
• Follow the instructions above for
figuring the tax on the S corporation
items;
• Carry the tax from line 7 of Schedule G
to line 23 on page 1; and
• Complete the rest of the return.
The grantor portion (if any) of an ESBT
will follow the rules discussed under
Grantor Type Trusts on page 5.
Electronic Filing
Qualified fiduciaries or transmitters may
be able to file Form 1041 and related
schedules electronically. If you wish to do
this, you must file Form 8633, Application
to Participate in the IRS e-file Program. If
you file Form 1041 electronically, you
must also file Form 8453-F, U.S. Estate
or Trust Income Tax Declaration and
Signature for Electronic Filing. For more
-7-
details, get Pub. 1437, Procedures for the
1041 e-file Program, and Pub. 1438, File
Specifications, Validation Criteria, and
Record Layouts for the Form 1041, e-file
Program, U.S. Income Tax Return for
Estates and Trusts for Tax Year 2006. If
Form 1041 is e-filed and there is a
balance due, the fiduciary may authorize
an electronic funds withdrawal with the
return.
When To File
For calendar year estates and trusts, file
Form 1041 and Schedule(s) K-1 on or
before April 17, 2007. For fiscal year
estates and trusts, file Form 1041 by the
15th day of the 4th month following the
close of the tax year. For example, an
estate that has a tax year that ends on
April 30, 2007, must file Form 1041 by
August 15, 2007. If the due date falls on a
Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, file on
the next business day.
Private Delivery Services
You can use certain private delivery
services designated by the IRS to meet
the “timely mailing as timely filing/paying”
rule for tax returns and payments. These
private delivery services include only the
following.
• DHL Worldwide Express (DHL): DHL
Same Day Service, DHL Next Day 10:30
am, DHL Next Day 12:00 pm, DHL Next
Day 3:00 pm, and DHL 2nd Day Service.
• Federal Express (FedEx): FedEx
Priority Overnight, FedEx Standard
Overnight, FedEx 2Day, FedEx
International Priority, and FedEx
International First.
• United Parcel Service (UPS): UPS Next
Day Air, UPS Next Day Air Saver, UPS
2nd Day Air, UPS 2nd Day Air A.M., UPS
Worldwide Express Plus, and UPS
Worldwide Express.
The private delivery service can tell
you how to get written proof of the mailing
date.
Extension of Time To File
If more time is needed to file the estate or
trust return, use Form 7004, Application
for Automatic 6-Month Extension of Time
To File Certain Business Income Tax,
Information, and Other Returns, to apply
for an automatic 6-month extension of
time to file.
Period Covered
File the 2006 return for calendar year
2006 and fiscal years beginning in 2006
and ending in 2007. If the return is for a
fiscal year or a short tax year (less than
12 months), fill in the tax year space at
the top of the form.
The 2006 Form 1041 may also be
used for a tax year beginning in 2007 if:
1. The estate or trust has a tax year of
less than 12 months that begins and ends
in 2007, and
2. The 2007 Form 1041 is not
available by the time the estate or trust is
required to file its tax return. However, the
estate or trust must show its 2007 tax
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year on the 2006 Form 1041 and
incorporate any tax law changes that are
effective for tax years beginning after
December 31, 2006.
Who Must Sign
Fiduciary
The fiduciary, or an authorized
representative, must sign Form 1041. If
there are joint fiduciaries, only one is
required to sign the return.
A financial institution that submitted
estimated tax payments for trusts for
which it is the trustee must enter its
employer identification number (EIN) in
the space provided for the EIN of the
fiduciary. Do not enter the EIN of the
trust. For this purpose, a financial
institution is one that maintains a
Treasury Tax and Loan account. If you
are an attorney or other individual
functioning in a fiduciary capacity, leave
this space blank. Do not enter your
individual social security number (SSN).
If you, as fiduciary, fill in Form 1041,
leave the Paid Preparer’s space blank. If
someone prepares this return and does
not charge you, that person should not
sign the return.
Paid Preparer
Generally, anyone who is paid to prepare
a tax return must sign the return and fill in
the other blanks in the Paid Preparer’s
Use Only area of the return.
The person required to sign the return
must:
• Complete the required preparer
information,
• Sign it in the space provided for the
preparer’s signature (a facsimile signature
is acceptable), and
• Give you a copy of the return for your
records.
Paid Preparer Authorization
If the fiduciary wants to allow the IRS to
discuss the estate’s or trust’s 2006 tax
return with the paid preparer who signed
it, check the “Yes” box in the signature
area of the return. This authorization
applies only to the individual whose
signature appears in the “Paid Preparer’s
Use Only” section of the estate’s or trust’s
return. It does not apply to the firm, if any,
shown in that section.
If the “Yes” box is checked, the
fiduciary is authorizing the IRS to call the
paid preparer to answer any questions
that may arise during the processing of
the estate’s or trust’s return. The fiduciary
is also authorizing the paid preparer to:
• Give the IRS any information that is
missing from the estate’s or trust’s return,
• Call the IRS for information about the
processing of the estate’s or trust’s return
or the status of its refund or payment(s),
and
• Respond to certain IRS notices that the
fiduciary has shared with the preparer
about math errors, offsets, and return
preparation. The notices will not be sent
to the preparer.
The fiduciary is not authorizing the
paid preparer to receive any refund
check, bind the estate or trust to anything
(including any additional tax liability), or
otherwise represent the estate or trust
before the IRS.
The authorization will automatically
end no later than the due date (without
regard to extensions) for filing the estate’s
or trust’s 2007 tax return. If the fiduciary
wants to expand the paid preparer’s
authorization or revoke the authorization
before it ends, see Pub. 947, Practice
Before the IRS and Power of Attorney.
Accounting Methods
Figure taxable income using the method
of accounting regularly used in keeping
the estate’s or trust’s books and records.
Generally, permissible methods include
the cash method, the accrual method, or
any other method authorized by the
Internal Revenue Code. In all cases, the
method used must clearly reflect income.
Generally, the estate or trust may
change its accounting method (for income
as a whole or for any material item) only
by getting consent on Form 3115,
Application for Change in Accounting
Method. For more information, see Pub.
538, Accounting Periods and Methods.
Accounting Periods
For a decedent’s estate, the moment of
death determines the end of the
decedent’s tax year and the beginning of
the estate’s tax year. As executor or
administrator, you choose the estate’s tax
period when you file its first income tax
return. The estate’s first tax year may be
any period of 12 months or less that ends
on the last day of a month. If you select
the last day of any month other than
December, you are adopting a fiscal tax
year.
To change the accounting period of an
estate, get Form 1128, Application To
Adopt, Change, or Retain a Tax Year.
Generally, a trust must adopt a
calendar year. The following trusts are
exempt from this requirement:
• A trust that is exempt from tax under
section 501(a);
• A charitable trust described in section
4947(a)(1); and
• A trust that is treated as wholly owned
by a grantor under the rules of sections
671 through 679.
Rounding Off to Whole
Dollars
You may round off cents to whole dollars
on the estate’s or trust’s return and
schedules. If you do round to whole
dollars, you must round all amounts. To
round, drop amounts under 50 cents and
increase amounts from 50 to 99 cents to
the next dollar. For example, $1.39
becomes $1 and $2.50 becomes $3.
-8-
If you have to add two or more
amounts to figure the amount to enter on
a line, include cents when adding the
amounts and round off only the total.
Estimated Tax
Generally, an estate or trust must pay
estimated income tax for 2007 if it
expects to owe, after subtracting any
withholding and credits, at least $1,000 in
tax, and it expects the withholding and
credits to be less than the smaller of:
1. 90% of the tax shown on the 2007
tax return, or
2. 100% of the tax shown on the 2006
tax return (110% of that amount if the
estate’s or trust’s adjusted gross income
on that return is more than $150,000, and
less than 2/3 of gross income for 2006 or
2007 is from farming or fishing).
However, if a return was not filed for
2006 or that return did not cover a full 12
months, item 2 does not apply.
For this purpose, include household
employment taxes in the tax shown on
the tax return, but only if either of the
following is true:
• The estate or trust will have federal
income tax withheld for 2007 (see the
instructions on page 20 for line 24e), or
• The estate or trust would be required to
make estimated tax payments for 2007
even if it did not include household
employment taxes when figuring
estimated tax.
Exceptions
Estimated tax payments are not required
from:
1. An estate of a domestic decedent
or a domestic trust that had no tax liability
for the full 12-month 2006 tax year;
2. A decedent’s estate for any tax
year ending before the date that is 2
years after the decedent’s death; or
3. A trust that was treated as owned
by the decedent if the trust will receive the
residue of the decedent’s estate under
the will (or if no will is admitted to probate,
the trust primarily responsible for paying
debts, taxes, and expenses of
administration) for any tax year ending
before the date that is 2 years after the
decedent’s death.
For more information, see Form
1041-ES, Estimated Income Tax for
Estates and Trusts.
Electronic Deposits
A financial institution that maintains a
Treasury Tax and Loan (TT&L) account,
and acts as a fiduciary for at least 200
taxable trusts that are required to pay
estimated tax, may be required to deposit
the estimated tax payments electronically
using the Electronic Federal Tax Payment
System (EFTPS). The electronic deposit
requirement applies in 2007 if:
• The total deposits of depository taxes
(such as estimated, employment, or
excise tax) in 2005 were more than
$200,000, or
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• The fiduciary (on behalf of a trust) was
required to use EFTPS in 2006.
If the fiduciary is required to use
EFTPS on behalf of a trust and fails to do
so, it may be subject to a 10% penalty.
A fiduciary that is not required to make
electronic deposits of estimated tax on
behalf of a trust may either use the
payment vouchers (see Form 1041-ES)
or voluntarily participate in EFTPS. To
enroll in or get more information about
EFTPS, call 1-800-555-4477.
Depositing on time. For deposits made
by EFTPS to be on time, the fiduciary
must initiate the transaction at least 1
business day before the date the deposit
is due.
Section 643(g) Election
Fiduciaries of trusts that pay estimated
tax may elect under section 643(g) to
have any portion of their estimated tax
payments allocated to any of the
beneficiaries.
The fiduciary of a decedent’s estate
may make a section 643(g) election only
for the final year of the estate.
You make the election by filing Form
1041-T, Allocation of Estimated Tax
Payments to Beneficiaries, by the 65th
day after the close of the estate’s or
trust’s tax year. Then, you include that
amount on the Schedule K-1 for the
beneficiary(ies) for whom you elected it.
Failure to make a timely election will
result in the estimated tax payments not
being transferred to the beneficiary(ies)
even if you entered the amount you
wanted transferred on Schedule K-1.
See the instructions for line 24b on
page 20 for more details.
Interest and Penalties
Interest
Interest is charged on taxes not paid by
the due date, even if an extension of time
to file is granted.
Interest is also charged on penalties
imposed for failure to file, negligence,
fraud, substantial valuation
misstatements, substantial
understatements of tax, and reportable
transaction understatements. Interest is
charged on the penalty from the due date
of the return (including extensions). The
interest charge is figured at a rate
determined under section 6621.
Late Filing of Return
The law provides a penalty of 5% of the
tax due for each month, or part of a
month, for which a return is not filed up to
a maximum of 25% of the tax due (15%
for each month, or part of a month, up to
a maximum of 75% if the failure to file is
fraudulent). If the return is more than 60
days late, the minimum penalty is the
smaller of $100 or the tax due. The
penalty will not be imposed if you can
show that the failure to file on time was
due to reasonable cause. If the failure is
due to reasonable cause, attach an
explanation to the return.
Guide, for more details, including the
definition of responsible persons.
Late Payment of Tax
Other Penalties
Generally, the penalty for not paying tax
when due is 1/2 of 1% of the unpaid
amount for each month or part of a month
it remains unpaid. The maximum penalty
is 25% of the unpaid amount. The penalty
applies to any unpaid tax on the return.
Any penalty is in addition to interest
charges on late payments.
Other penalties can be imposed for
negligence, substantial understatement of
tax, and fraud. See Pub. 17, Your Federal
Income Tax, for details on these
penalties.
If you include interest or either of
TIP these penalties with your
payment, identify and enter these
amounts in the bottom margin of Form
1041, page 1. Do not include the interest
or penalty amount in the balance of tax
due on line 27.
Failure To Provide Information
Timely
You must provide Schedule K-1 (Form
1041), on or before the day you are
required to file Form 1041, to each
beneficiary who receives a distribution of
property or an allocation of an item of the
estate.
For each failure to provide Schedule
K-1 to a beneficiary when due and each
failure to include on Schedule K-1 all the
information required to be shown (or the
inclusion of incorrect information), a $50
penalty may be imposed with regard to
each Schedule K-1 for which a failure
occurs. The maximum penalty is
$100,000 for all such failures during a
calendar year. If the requirement to report
information is intentionally disregarded,
each $50 penalty is increased to $100 or,
if greater, 10% of the aggregate amount
of items required to be reported, and the
$100,000 maximum does not apply.
The penalty will not be imposed if the
fiduciary can show that not providing
information timely was due to reasonable
cause and not due to willful neglect.
Underpaid Estimated Tax
If the fiduciary underpaid estimated tax,
use Form 2210, Underpayment of
Estimated Tax by Individuals, Estates,
and Trusts, to figure any penalty. Enter
the amount of any penalty on line 26,
Form 1041.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
This penalty may apply if certain excise,
income, social security, and Medicare
taxes that must be collected or withheld
are not collected or withheld, or these
taxes are not paid. These taxes are
generally reported on Forms 720, 941,
943, or 945. The trust fund recovery
penalty may be imposed on all persons
who are determined by the IRS to have
been responsible for collecting,
accounting for, or paying over these
taxes, and who acted willfully in not doing
so. The penalty is equal to the unpaid
trust fund tax. See the instructions for
Form 720, Pub. 15 (Circular E),
Employer’s Tax Guide, or Pub. 51
(Circular A), Agricultural Employer’s Tax
-9-
Other Forms That May Be
Required
Forms W-2 and W-3, Wage and Tax
Statement; and Transmittal of Wage and
Tax Statements.
Form 56, Notice Concerning Fiduciary
Relationship. You must notify the IRS of
the creation or termination of a fiduciary
relationship. You may use Form 56 to
provide this notice to the IRS.
Form 706, United States Estate (and
Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax
Return; or Form 706-NA, United States
Estate (and Generation-Skipping
Transfer) Tax Return, Estate of
nonresident not a citizen of the United
States.
Form 706-GS(D), Generation-Skipping
Transfer Tax Return for Distributions.
Form 706-GS(D-1), Notification of
Distribution From a Generation-Skipping
Trust.
Form 706-GS(T), Generation-Skipping
Transfer Tax Return for Terminations.
Form 709, United States Gift (and
Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax
Return.
Form 720, Quarterly Federal Excise
Tax Return. Use Form 720 to report
environmental excise taxes,
communications and air transportation
taxes, fuel taxes, luxury tax on passenger
vehicles, manufacturers’ taxes, ship
passenger tax, and certain other excise
taxes.
Caution: See Trust Fund Recovery
Penalty earlier.
Form 926, Return by a U.S. Transferor
of Property to a Foreign Corporation. Use
this form to report certain information
required under section 6038B.
Form 940 or Form 940-EZ, Employer’s
Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA)
Tax Return. The estate or trust may be
liable for FUTA tax and may have to file
Form 940 or 940-EZ if it paid wages of
$1,500 or more in any calendar quarter
during the calendar year (or the preceding
calendar year) or one or more employees
worked for the estate or trust for some
part of a day in any 20 different weeks
during the calendar year (or the preceding
calendar year).
Form 941, Employer’s Quarterly
Federal Tax Return. Employers must file
this form quarterly to report income tax
withheld on wages and employer and
employee social security and Medicare
taxes. Agricultural employers must file
Form 943, Employer’s Annual Federal
Tax Return for Agricultural Employees,
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instead of Form 941, to report income tax
withheld and employer and employee
social security and Medicare taxes on
farmworkers.
Caution: See Trust Fund Recovery
Penalty earlier.
Form 945, Annual Return of Withheld
Federal Income Tax. Use this form to
report income tax withheld from
nonpayroll payments, including pensions,
annuities, IRAs, gambling winnings, and
backup withholding.
Caution: See Trust Fund Recovery
Penalty earlier.
Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income
Tax Return.
Form 1040NR, U.S. Nonresident Alien
Income Tax Return.
Form 1041-A, U.S. Information
Return — Trust Accumulation of
Charitable Amounts.
Forms 1042 and 1042-S, Annual
Withholding Tax Return for U.S. Source
Income of Foreign Persons; and Foreign
Person’s U.S. Source Income Subject to
Withholding. Use these forms to report
and transmit withheld tax on payments or
distributions made to nonresident alien
individuals, foreign partnerships, or
foreign corporations to the extent such
payments or distributions constitute gross
income from sources within the United
States that is not effectively connected
with a U.S. trade or business. For more
information, see sections 1441 and 1442,
and Pub. 515, Withholding of Tax on
Nonresident Aliens and Foreign Entities.
Forms 1099-A, B, INT, LTC, MISC,
OID, R, S, and SA. You may have to file
these information returns to report
acquisitions or abandonments of secured
property; proceeds from broker and barter
exchange transactions; interest
payments; payments of long-term care
and accelerated death benefits;
miscellaneous income payments; original
issue discount; distributions from
pensions, annuities, retirement or
profit-sharing plans, IRAs (including
SEPs, SIMPLEs, Roth IRAs, Roth
Conversions, and IRA
recharacterizations), Coverdell ESAs,
insurance contracts, etc.; proceeds from
real estate transactions; and distributions
from an HSA, Archer MSA, or Medicare
Advantage MSA.
Also, use certain of these returns to
report amounts received as a nominee on
behalf of another person, except amounts
reported to beneficiaries on Schedule K-1
(Form 1041).
Form 8264, Application for
Registration of a Tax Shelter. Until further
guidance is issued, material advisors who
provide material aid, assistance, or advice
with respect to any reportable transaction
must use Form 8264 to disclose
reportable transactions in accordance
with interim guidance provided in Notice
2004-80, 2004-50, I.R.B. 963,
Notice 2005-17, 2005-8 I.R.B. 606, and
Notice 2005-22, 2005-12 I.R.B. 756.
Form 8275, Disclosure Statement. File
Form 8275 to disclose items or positions,
except those contrary to a regulation, that
are not otherwise adequately disclosed
on a tax return. The disclosure is made to
avoid parts of the accuracy-related
penalty imposed for disregard of rules or
substantial understatement of tax. Form
8275 is also used for disclosures relating
to preparer penalties for understatements
due to unrealistic positions or disregard of
rules.
Form 8275-R, Regulation Disclosure
Statement, is used to disclose any item
on a tax return for which a position has
been taken that is contrary to Treasury
regulations.
Forms 8288 and 8288-A, U.S.
Withholding Tax Return for Dispositions
by Foreign Persons of U.S. Real Property
Interests; and Statement of Withholding
on Dispositions by Foreign Persons of
U.S. Real Property Interests. Use these
forms to report and transmit withheld tax
on the sale of U.S. real property by a
foreign person. Also, use these forms to
report and transmit tax withheld from
amounts distributed to a foreign
beneficiary from a “U.S. real property
interest account” that a domestic estate or
trust is required to establish under
Regulations section 1.1445-5(c)(1)(iii).
Form 8300, Report of Cash Payments
Over $10,000 Received in a Trade or
Business. Generally, this form is used to
report the receipt of more than $10,000 in
cash or foreign currency in one
transaction (or a series of related
transactions).
Form 8855, Election To Treat a
Qualified Revocable Trust as Part of an
Estate. This election allows a qualified
revocable trust to be treated and taxed
(for income tax purposes) as part of its
related estate during the election period.
Form 8865, Return of U.S. Persons
With Respect to Certain Foreign
Partnerships. The estate or trust may
have to file Form 8865 if it:
1. Controlled a foreign partnership
(that is, owned more than a 50% direct or
indirect interest in a foreign partnership);
2. Owned at least a 10% direct or
indirect interest in a foreign partnership
while U.S. persons controlled that
partnership;
3. Had an acquisition, disposition, or
change in proportional interest in a
foreign partnership that:
a. Increased its direct interest to at
least 10%;
b. Reduced its direct interest of at
least 10% to less than 10%; or
c. Changed its direct interest by at
least a 10% interest.
4. Contributed property to a foreign
partnership in exchange for a partnership
interest if:
a. Immediately after the contribution,
the estate or trust owned, directly or
indirectly, at least a 10% interest in the
foreign partnership or
-10-
b. The fair market value of the
property the estate or trust contributed to
the foreign partnership, for a partnership
interest, when added to other
contributions of property made to the
foreign partnership during the preceding
12-month period, exceeds $100,000.
Also, the estate or trust may have to
file Form 8865 to report certain
dispositions by a foreign partnership of
property it previously contributed to that
foreign partnership if it was a partner at
the time of the disposition.
For more details, including penalties
for failing to file Form 8865, see Form
8865 and its separate instructions.
Tax shelter disclosure statement. Use
Form 8886, Reportable Transaction
Disclosure Statement, to disclose
information for each reportable
transaction in which the trust participated,
directly or indirectly. Form 8886 must be
filed for each tax year that the federal
income tax liability of the estate or trust is
affected by its participation in the
transaction. The estate or trust may have
to pay a penalty if it has a requirement to
file Form 8886 but you fail to file it. The
following are reportable transactions.
• Any transaction the same as or
substantially similar to tax avoidance
transactions identified by the IRS.
• Any transaction offered under
conditions of confidentiality.
• Any transaction for which the estate or
trust has contractual protection against
disallowance of the tax benefits.
• Any transaction resulting in a loss of at
least $2 million in any single year or $4
million in any combination of years
($50,000 in any single year if the loss is
generated by a section 988 transaction).
• Any transaction resulting in a book-tax
difference of more than $10 million on a
gross basis.
• Any transaction resulting in a tax credit
of more than $250,000, if the estate or
trust held the asset generating the credit
for less than 45 days.
See the Instructions for Form 8886 for
more details and exceptions.
Form 8913, Credit for Federal
Telephone Excise Tax Paid, is used to
request a credit or refund of the excise
tax paid on long distance or bundled
service that was billed after February 28,
2003, and before August 1, 2006.
Assembly and
Attachments
Assemble any schedules, forms and/or
attachments behind Form 1041 in the
following order:
1. Schedule D (Form 1041);
2. Form 4952;
3. Schedule H (Form 1040);
4. Form 4136;
5. Form 8855;
6. Form 8913;
7. All other schedules and forms; and
8. All attachments.
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Attachments
When To File
If you need more space on the forms or
schedules, attach separate sheets. Use
the same size and format as on the
printed forms. But show the totals on the
printed forms.
Attach these separate sheets after all
the schedules and forms. Enter the
estate’s or trust’s EIN on each sheet.
Do not file a copy of the decedent’s will
or the trust instrument unless the IRS
requests it.
File Form 1041 on or before the 15th day
of the 4th month following the close of the
tax year. Use Form 7004 to apply for an
extension of time to file.
Additional Information
The following publications may assist you
in preparing Form 1041.
Pub. 550, Investment Income and
Expenses, and Pub. 559, Survivors,
Executors, and Administrators.
Of Special Interest to
Bankruptcy Trustees and
Debtors-in-Possession
Taxation of Bankruptcy Estates
of an Individual
The bankruptcy estate that is created
when an individual debtor files a petition
under either chapter 7 or 11 of title 11 of
the U.S. Code is treated as a separate
taxable entity. The bankruptcy estate is
administered by a trustee or a
debtor-in-possession. If the case is later
dismissed by the bankruptcy court, the
individual debtor is treated as if the
bankruptcy petition had never been filed.
A separate taxable entity is not created
if a partnership or corporation files a
petition under any chapter of title 11 of
the U.S. Code.
Who Must File
Every trustee (or debtor-in-possession)
for an individual’s bankruptcy estate
under chapter 7 or 11 of title 11 of the
U.S. Code must file a return if the
bankruptcy estate has gross income of
$8,450 or more for tax years beginning in
2006.
Failure to do so may result in an
estimated Request for Administrative
Expenses being filed by the IRS in the
bankruptcy proceeding or a motion to
compel filing of the return.
The filing of a tax return for the
bankruptcy estate does not relieve
CAUTION the individual debtor of his or her
(or their) individual tax obligations.
!
Employer Identification Number
Every bankruptcy estate of an individual
required to file a return must have its own
EIN. The SSN of the individual debtor
cannot be used as the EIN for the
bankruptcy estate.
Accounting Period
A bankruptcy estate is allowed to have a
fiscal year. The period can be no longer
than 12 months.
Disclosure of Return
Information
Under section 6103(e)(5), tax returns of
individual debtors who have filed for
bankruptcy under chapters 7 or 11 of title
11 are, upon written request, open to
inspection by or disclosure to the trustee.
The returns subject to disclosure to the
trustee are those for the year the
bankruptcy begins and prior years. Use
Form 4506, Request for Copy of Tax
Return, to request copies of the individual
debtor’s tax returns.
If the bankruptcy case was not
voluntary, disclosure cannot be made
before the bankruptcy court has entered
an order for relief, unless the court rules
that the disclosure is needed for
determining whether relief should be
ordered.
Transfer of Tax Attributes From
the Individual Debtor to the
Bankruptcy Estate
The bankruptcy estate succeeds to the
following tax attributes of the individual
debtor:
1. Net operating loss (NOL)
carryovers;
2. Charitable contributions carryovers;
3. Recovery of tax benefit items;
4. Credit carryovers;
5. Capital loss carryovers;
6. Basis, holding period, and
character of assets;
7. Method of accounting;
8. Unused passive activity losses;
9. Unused passive activity credits;
and
10. Unused section 465 losses.
Income, Deductions, and
Credits
Under section 1398(c), the taxable
income of the bankruptcy estate generally
is figured in the same manner as an
individual. The gross income of the
bankruptcy estate includes any income
included in property of the estate as
defined in title 11 sections 541 and 1115.
Section 1115 was added to title 11 of the
U.S. Code by the Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection Act
of 2005. Section 1115 of title 11 of the
U.S. Code expands the definition of
property of the estate in chapter 11 cases
filed by individuals after October 16,
2005, and in chapter 11 cases begun by
creditors against an individual debtor
(involuntary cases) after that date. Under
section 1115 of title 11 of the U.S. Code,
property of the bankruptcy estate includes
(a) earnings from services performed by
the debtor after the beginning of the case
(both wages and self-employment
income) and before the case is closed,
dismissed, or converted to a case under a
-11-
different chapter and (b) property
described in section 541 of title 11 of the
U.S. Code and income earned therefrom
that the debtor acquires after the
beginning of the case and before the case
is closed, dismissed, or converted. If
section 1115 of title 11 of the U.S. Code
applies, the bankruptcy estate’s gross
income includes, as described above, (a)
the debtor’s earnings from services
performed after the beginning of the case
and (b) the income from property
acquired after the beginning of the case.
The income from property owned by
the debtor when the case began is also
included in the bankruptcy estate’s gross
income. However, if this property is
exempted from the bankruptcy estate or
is abandoned by the trustee or
debtor-in-possession, the income from
the property is not included in the
bankruptcy estate’s gross income. Also
included in income is gain from the sale of
the bankruptcy estate’s property. To
figure gain, the trustee or
debtor-in-possession must determine the
correct basis of the property.
To determine whether any amount
paid or incurred by the bankruptcy estate
is allowable as a deduction or credit, or is
treated as wages for employment tax
purposes, treat the amount as if it were
paid or incurred by the individual debtor in
the same trade or business or other
activity the debtor engaged in before the
bankruptcy proceedings began.
Administrative expenses. The
bankruptcy estate is allowed a deduction
for any administrative expense allowed
under section 503 of title 11 of the U.S.
Code, and any fee or charge assessed
under chapter 123 of title 28 of the U.S.
Code, to the extent not disallowed under
an Internal Revenue Code provision (for
example, section 263, 265, or 275).
Administrative expense loss. When
figuring a net operating loss, nonbusiness
deductions (including administrative
expenses) are limited under section
172(d)(4) to the bankruptcy estate’s
nonbusiness income. The excess
nonbusiness deductions are an
administrative expense loss that may be
carried back to each of the 3 preceding
tax years and forward to each of the 7
succeeding tax years of the bankruptcy
estate. The amount of an administrative
expense loss that may be carried to any
tax year is determined after the net
operating loss deductions allowed for that
year. An administrative expense loss is
allowed only to the bankruptcy estate and
cannot be carried to any tax year of the
individual debtor.
Carryback of net operating losses and
credits. If the bankruptcy estate itself
incurs a net operating loss (apart from
losses carried forward to the estate from
the individual debtor), it can carry back its
net operating losses not only to previous
tax years of the bankruptcy estate, but
also to tax years of the individual debtor
prior to the year in which the bankruptcy
proceedings began. Excess credits, such
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as the foreign tax credit, also may be
carried back to pre-bankruptcy years of
the individual debtor.
Exemption. For tax years beginning in
2006, a bankruptcy estate is allowed a
personal exemption of $3,300.
Standard deduction. For tax years
beginning in 2006, a bankruptcy estate
that does not itemize deductions is
allowed a standard deduction of $5,150.
Discharge of indebtedness. In a title 11
case, gross income does not include
amounts that normally would be included
in gross income resulting from the
discharge of indebtedness. However, any
amounts excluded from gross income
must be applied to reduce certain tax
attributes in a certain order. Attach Form
982, Reduction of Tax Attributes Due to
Discharge of Indebtedness, to show the
reduction of tax attributes.
Tax Rate Schedule
Figure the tax for the bankruptcy estate
using the tax rate schedule below. Enter
the tax on Form 1040, line 44.
If taxable income is:
Over —
But not
over —
The tax is:
$0
7,550
30,650
61,850
94,225
168,275
$7,550
30,650
61,850
94,225
168,275
------
10%
$755.00 + 15%
4,220.00 + 25%
12,020.00 + 28%
21,085.00 + 33%
45,521.50 + 35%
Of the
amount
over —
$0
7,550
30,650
61,850
94,225
168,275
Prompt Determination of Tax
Liability
To request a prompt determination of the
tax liability of the bankruptcy estate, the
trustee or debtor-in-possession must file a
written request for the determination with
the IRS. The request must be submitted
in duplicate and executed under penalties
of perjury. The request must include a
statement indicating that it is a request for
prompt determination of tax liability and:
(a) the return type, and all the tax periods
for which prompt determination is sought;
(b) the name and location of the office
where the return was filed; (c) the
debtor’s name; (d) the debtor’s social
security number, taxpayer identification
number, or employer identification
number; (e) the type of bankruptcy estate;
(f) the bankruptcy case number; and (g)
the court where the bankruptcy is
pending. Send the request to the
Centralized Insolvency Operation, P.O.
Box 21126, Philadelphia, PA 19114
(marked “Request for Prompt
Determination”).
The IRS will notify the trustee or
debtor-in-possession within 60 days from
receipt of the request if the return filed by
the trustee or debtor-in-possession has
been selected for examination or has
been accepted as filed. If the return is
selected for examination, it will be
examined as soon as possible. The IRS
will notify the trustee or
debtor-in-possession of any tax due
within 180 days from receipt of the
request or within any additional time
permitted by the bankruptcy court.
See Rev. Proc. 2006-24, 2006-22
I.R.B. 943, available at www.irs.gov/irb/
2006 – 22_IRB/ar12.html.
Special Filing Instructions for
Bankruptcy Estates
Use Form 1041 only as a transmittal for
Form 1040. In the top margin of Form
1040 write “Attachment to Form 1041. DO
NOT DETACH.” Attach Form 1040 to
Form 1041. Complete only the
identification area at the top of Form
1041. Enter the name of the individual
debtor in the following format: “John Q.
Public Bankruptcy Estate.” Beneath, enter
the name of the trustee in the following
format: “Avery Snow, Trustee.” In item D,
enter the date the petition was filed or the
date of conversion to a chapter 7 or 11
case.
Enter on Form 1041, line 23, the total
tax from line 63 of Form 1040. Complete
lines 24 through 29 of Form 1041, and
sign and date it.
In a chapter 11 case filed after October
16, 2005, the bankruptcy estate’s gross
income may be affected by section 1115
of title 11 of the U.S. Code. See Income,
Deductions, and Credits earlier. The
debtor may receive a Form W-2,
1099-INT, 1099-DIV, or 1099-MISC or
other information return reporting wages
or other income to the debtor for the
entire year, even though some or all of
this income is includible in the bankruptcy
estate’s gross income under section 1115
of title 11 of the U.S. Code. If this
happens, the income reported to the
debtor on the Form W-2, 1099 or other
information return (and the withheld
income tax shown on these forms) must
be reasonably allocated between the
debtor and the bankruptcy estate. The
debtor-in-possession (or the chapter 11
trustee, if one was appointed) must attach
a schedule that shows (a) all the income
reported on the Form W-2, 1099, or other
information return (b) the portion of this
income includible in the bankruptcy
estate’s gross income and (c) all the
withheld income tax, if any, and the
portion of withheld tax reasonably
allocated to the bankruptcy estate. Also,
the debtor-in-possesion (or the chapter 11
trustee, if one was appointed) must attach
a copy of the Form W-2, if any, issued to
the debtor for the tax year if the Form W-2
reports wages to the debtor and some or
all of the wages are includible in the
bankruptcy estate’s gross income
because of section 1115 of title 11 of the
U.S. Code.
used to apply for the EIN. If the name of
the trust was changed during the tax year
for which you are filing, enter the trust’s
new name and check the Change in
trust’s name box in item F.
If a grantor type trust (discussed
below), write the name, identification
number, and address of the grantor(s) or
other owner(s) in parentheses after the
name of the trust.
Name and Title of
Fiduciary
Enter the name and title of the fiduciary. If
the name entered is different than the
name on the prior year’s return, see
Change in Fiduciary’s Name and Change
in Fiduciary on page 14.
Address
Include the suite, room, or other unit
number after the street address. If the
Post Office does not deliver mail to the
street address and the fiduciary has a
P.O. box, show the box number instead.
If you want a third party (such as an
accountant or an attorney) to receive mail
for the estate or trust, enter on the street
address line “C/O” followed by the third
party’s name and street address or P.O.
box.
If the estate or trust has had a change
of address (including a change to an “in
care of” name and address) and did not
file Form 8822, Change of Address,
check the Change in fiduciary’s address
box in item F.
If the estate or trust has a change of
mailing address (including a new ‘‘in care
of’’ name and address) after filing its
return, file Form 8822 to notify the IRS of
the change.
A. Type of Entity
Check the appropriate box that describes
the entity for which you are filing the
return.
If only a portion of a trust is a grantor
type trust or if only a portion of an electing
small business trust is the S portion, then
more then one box can be checked.
There are special filing
requirements for grantor type
CAUTION trusts, pooled income funds,
electing small business trusts, and
bankruptcy estates. See Special Filing
Instructions for Grantor Type Trusts,
Pooled Income Funds, and Electing Small
Business Trusts on page 5, or Of Special
Interest to Bankruptcy Trustees and
Debtors-in-Possession on page 11.
!
Decedent’s Estate
Specific Instructions
Name of Estate or Trust
Copy the exact name of the estate or trust
from the Form SS-4, Application for
Employer Identification Number, that you
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An estate of a deceased person is a
taxable entity separate from the
decedent. It generally continues to exist
until the final distribution of the assets of
the estate is made to the heirs and other
beneficiaries. The income earned from
the property of the estate during the
period of administration or settlement
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must be accounted for and reported by
the estate.
Simple Trust
A trust may qualify as a simple trust if:
1. The trust instrument requires that
all income must be distributed currently;
2. The trust instrument does not
provide that any amounts are to be paid,
permanently set aside, or used for
charitable purposes; and
3. The trust does not distribute
amounts allocated to the corpus of the
trust.
Complex Trust
A complex trust is any trust that does not
qualify as a simple trust as explained
above.
Qualified Disability Trust
A qualified disability trust is any
nongrantor trust:
1. Described in 42 U.S.C.
1396p(c)(2)(B)(iv) and established solely
for the benefit of an individual under 65
years of age who is disabled, and
2. All the beneficiaries of which are
determined by the Commissioner of
Social Security to have been disabled for
some part of the tax year within the
meaning of 42 U.S.C. 1382c(a)(3).
A trust will not fail to meet 2 above just
because the trust’s corpus may revert to a
person who is not disabled after the trust
ceases to have any disabled
beneficiaries.
ESBT (S Portion Only)
The S portion of an electing small
business trust (ESBT) is the portion of the
trust that consists of S corporation stock
and that is not treated as owned by the
grantor or another person. See page 7 of
the instructions for more information
about an ESBT.
Grantor Type Trust
A grantor type trust is a legal trust under
applicable state law that is not recognized
as a separate taxable entity for income
tax purposes because the grantor or other
substantial owners have not relinquished
complete dominion and control over the
trust.
Generally, for transfers made in trust
after March 1, 1986, the grantor is treated
as the owner of any portion of a trust in
which he or she has a reversionary
interest in either the income or corpus
therefrom, if, as of the inception of that
portion of the trust, the value of the
reversionary interest is more than 5% of
the value of that portion. Also, the grantor
is treated as holding any power or interest
that was held by either the grantor’s
spouse at the time that the power or
interest was created or who became the
grantor’s spouse after the creation of that
power or interest.
Mortgage pools. The trustee of a
mortgage pool, such as the Federal
National Mortgage Association, collects
principal and interest payments on each
mortgage and makes distributions to the
certificate holders. Each pool is
considered a grantor type trust, and each
certificate holder is treated as the owner
of an undivided interest in the entire trust
under the grantor trust rules. Certificate
holders must report their proportionate
share of the mortgage interest and other
items of income on their individual tax
returns.
Pre-need funeral trusts. The
purchasers of pre-need funeral services
are the grantors and the owners of
pre-need funeral trusts established under
state laws. See Rev. Rul. 87-127, 1987-2
C.B. 156. However, the trustees of
pre-need funeral trusts can elect to file
the return and pay the tax for qualified
funeral trusts. For more information, see
Form 1041-QFT, U.S. Income Tax Return
for Qualified Funeral Trusts.
Nonqualified deferred compensation
plans. Taxpayers may adopt and
maintain grantor trusts in connection with
nonqualified deferred compensation plans
(sometimes referred to as “rabbi trusts”).
Rev. Proc. 92-64, 1992-2 C.B. 422,
provides a “model grantor trust” for use in
rabbi trust arrangements. The procedure
also provides guidance for requesting
rulings on the plans that use these trusts.
Bankruptcy Estate
A chapter 7 or 11 bankruptcy estate is a
separate and distinct taxable entity from
the individual debtor for federal income
tax purposes. See Of Special Interest to
Bankruptcy Trustees and
Debtors-in-Possession on page 11.
For more information, see section
1398 and Pub. 908, Bankruptcy Tax
Guide.
Pooled Income Fund
A pooled income fund is a split-interest
trust with a remainder interest for a public
charity and a life income interest retained
by the donor or for another person. The
property is held in a pool with other
pooled income fund property and does
not include any tax-exempt securities.
The income for a retained life interest is
figured using the yearly rate of return
earned by the trust. See section 642(c)
and the related regulations for more
information.
B. Number of Schedules
K-1 Attached
Every trust or decedent’s estate claiming
an income distribution deduction on page
1, line 18, must enter the number of
Schedules K-1 (Form 1041) that are
attached to Form 1041.
C. Employer Identification
Number
Every estate or trust that is required to file
Form 1041 must have an EIN. An EIN
may be applied for:
• Online by clicking on the EIN link at
www.irs.gov/businesses/small. The EIN is
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issued immediately once the application
information is validated.
• By telephone at 1-800-829-4933 from
7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. in the fiduciary’s
local time zone. Assistance provided to
callers from Alaska and Hawaii will be
based on the hours of operation in the
Pacific time zone.
• By mailing or faxing Form SS-4,
Application for Employer Identification
Number.
If the estate or trust has not received its
EIN by the time the return is due, write
“Applied for” in the space for the EIN. For
more details, see Pub. 583, Starting a
Business and Keeping Records.
If you are filing a return for a mortgage
pool, such as one created under the
mortgage-backed security programs
administered by the Federal National
Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) or
the Government National Mortgage
Association (“Ginnie Mae”), the EIN stays
with the pool if that pool is traded from
one financial institution to another.
D. Date Entity Created
Enter the date the trust was created, or, if
a decedent’s estate, the date of the
decedent’s death.
E. Nonexempt Charitable
and Split-Interest Trusts
Section 4947(a)(1) Trust
Check this box if the trust is a nonexempt
charitable trust within the meaning of
section 4947(a)(1).
A nonexempt charitable trust is a trust:
• That is not exempt from tax under
section 501(a);
• In which all of the unexpired interests
are devoted to one or more charitable
purposes described in section
170(c)(2)(B); and
• For which a deduction was allowed
under section 170 (for individual
taxpayers) or similar Code section for
personal holding companies, foreign
personal holding companies, or estates or
trusts (including a deduction for estate or
gift tax purposes).
Nonexempt charitable trust treated as
a private foundation. If a nonexempt
charitable trust is treated as though it
were a private foundation under section
509, then the fiduciary must file Form
990-PF, Return of Private Foundation, in
addition to Form 1041.
If a nonexempt charitable trust is
treated as though it were a private
foundation, and it has no taxable income
under Subtitle A, it may file Form 990-PF
instead of Form 1041 to meet its section
6012 filing requirement. But, be sure to
answer Statement 13, on Part VII-A of
Form 990-PF.
Excise taxes. If a nonexempt
charitable trust is treated as a private
foundation, then it is subject to the same
excise taxes under chapters 41 and 42
that a private foundation is subject to. If
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the nonexempt charitable trust is liable for
any of these taxes (except the section
4940 tax), then it reports these taxes on
Form 4720, Return of Certain Excise
Taxes on Charities and Other Persons
Under Chapters 41 and 42 of the Internal
Revenue Code. Taxes paid by the trust
on Form 4720 or on Form 990-PF (the
section 4940 tax) cannot be taken as a
deduction on Form 1041.
Not a Private Foundation
Check this box if the nonexempt
charitable trust (section 4947(a)(1)) is not
treated as a private foundation under
section 509. For more information, see
Regulations section 53.4947-1.
Other returns that must be filed. If a
nonexempt charitable trust is not treated
as though it were a private foundation, the
fiduciary must file, in addition to Form
1041, Form 990 (or Form 990-EZ), Return
of Organization Exempt From Income
Tax, and Schedule A (Form 990 or
990-EZ), Organization Exempt Under
Section 501(c)(3), if the trust’s gross
receipts are normally more than $25,000.
If a nonexempt charitable trust is not
treated as though it were a private
foundation, and it has no taxable income
under Subtitle A, it can file either Form
990 or Form 990-EZ instead of Form
1041 to meet its section 6012 filing
requirement.
Section 4947(a)(2) Trust
Check this box if the trust is a
split-interest trust described in section
4947(a)(2).
A split-interest trust is a trust that:
• Is not exempt from tax under section
501(a);
• Has some unexpired interests that are
devoted to purposes other than religious,
charitable, or similar purposes described
in section 170(c)(2)(B); and
• Has amounts transferred in trust after
May 26, 1969, for which a deduction was
allowed under section 170 (for individual
taxpayers) or similar Code section for
personal holding companies, foreign
personal holding companies, or estates or
trusts (including a deduction for estate or
gift tax purposes).
Other returns that must be filed. The
fiduciary of a split-interest trust must file
Form 5227 (for amounts transferred in
trust after May 26, 1969); and Form
1041-A if the trust’s governing instrument
does not require that all of the trust’s
income be distributed currently.
If a split-interest trust has any
unrelated business taxable income,
however, it must file Form 1041 to report
all of its income and to pay any tax due.
F. Initial Return, Amended
Return, etc.
Amended Return
If you are filing an amended Form 1041:
• Check the “Amended return” box,
• Complete the entire return,
• Correct the appropriate lines with the
new information, and
• Refigure the estate’s or trust’s tax
liability.
If the total tax on line 23 is larger on
the amended return than on the original
return, you generally should pay the
difference with the amended return.
However, you should adjust this amount if
there is any increase or decrease in the
total payments shown on line 25.
Attach a sheet that explains the reason
for the amendments and identifies the
lines and amounts being changed on the
amended return.
Amended Schedule K-1 (Form 1041). If
the amended return results in a change to
income, or a change in distribution of any
income or other information provided to a
beneficiary, an amended Schedule K-1
(Form 1041) must also be filed with the
amended Form 1041 and given to each
beneficiary. Check the “Amended K-1”
box at the top of the amended Schedule
K-1.
the return (including a change to an ‘‘in
care of’’ name and address) and did not
report the change on Form 8822, check
this box.
If the address shown on Form 1041
changes after you file the form (including
a change to an ‘‘in care of’’ name and
address) file Form 8822 to notify the IRS
of the change.
G. Pooled Mortgage
Account
If you bought a pooled mortgage account
during the year and still have that pool at
the end of the tax year, check the
“Bought” box and enter the date of
purchase. If you sold a pooled mortgage
account that was purchased during this,
or a previous, tax year, check the “Sold”
box and enter the date of sale. If you
neither bought nor sold a pooled
mortgage account, skip this item.
Income
Final Return
Special Rule for Blind Trust
Check this box if this is a final return
because the estate or trust has
terminated. Also, check the “Final K-1”
box at the top of Schedule K-1.
If, on the final return, there are excess
deductions, an unused capital loss
carryover, or a net operating loss
carryover, see the instructions for
Schedule K-1, box 11, on page 43.
If you are reporting income from a
qualified blind trust (under the Ethics in
Government Act of 1978), do not identify
the payer of any income to the trust but
complete the rest of the return as
provided in the instructions. Also write
“Blind Trust” at the top of page 1.
Grantor type trusts that are
required to follow the 2007
CAUTION reporting rules for widely held
fixed investment trusts (WHFITs) under
Regulations section 1.671-5 (if the WHFIT
rules apply to the entire trust) must check
the final return box.
If the name of the trust has changed from
the name shown on the prior year’s return
(or Form SS-4 if this is the first return
being filed), be sure to check this box.
The estate or trust may exclude part of its
extraterritorial income from gross income.
For details and to figure the amount of the
exclusion, see Form 8873, Extraterritorial
Income Exclusion, and its separate
instructions. The estate or trust must
report the extraterritorial income exclusion
on line 15a of Form 1041, page 1.
Although the extraterritorial income
exclusion is entered on line 15a, it is an
exclusion from income and should be
treated as tax-exempt income when
completing other parts of the return.
Change in Fiduciary
Line 1—Interest Income
If a different fiduciary enters his or her
name on the line for Name and title of
fiduciary than was shown on the prior
year’s return (or Form SS-4 if this is the
first return being filed) and you did not file
a Form 8822, be sure to check this box. If
there is a change in the fiduciary whose
address is used as the mailing address
for the estate or trust after the return is
filed, use Form 8822 to notify the IRS.
Report the estate’s or trust’s share of all
taxable interest income that was received
during the tax year. Examples of taxable
interest include interest from:
• Accounts (including certificates of
deposit and money market accounts) with
banks, credit unions, and thrift institutions;
• Notes, loans, and mortgages;
• U.S. Treasury bills, notes, and bonds;
• U.S. savings bonds;
• Original issue discount; and
• Income received as a regular interest
holder of a real estate mortgage
investment conduit (REMIC).
For taxable bonds acquired after 1987,
amortizable bond premium is treated as
an offset to the interest income instead of
as a separate interest deduction. See
Pub. 550.
For the year of the decedent’s death,
Forms 1099-INT issued in the decedent’s
name may include interest income earned
!
Change in Trust’s Name
Change in Fiduciary’s Name
If the fiduciary changed his or her name
from the name that he or she entered on
the prior year’s return (or Form SS-4 if
this is the first return being filed), be sure
to check this box.
Change in Fiduciary’s Address
If the same fiduciary who filed the prior
year’s return (or Form SS-4 if this is the
first return being filed) files the current
year’s return and changed the address on
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Extraterritorial Income
Exclusion
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after the date of death that should be
reported on the income tax return of the
decedent’s estate. When preparing the
decedent’s final income tax return, report
on line 1 of Schedule B (Form 1040) or
Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) the total
interest shown on Form 1099-INT. Under
the last entry on line 1, subtotal all the
interest reported on line 1. Below the
subtotal, write “Form 1041” and the name
and address shown on Form 1041 for the
decedent’s estate. Also, show the part of
the interest reported on Form 1041 and
subtract it from the subtotal.
Line 2a—Total Ordinary
Dividends
Report the estate’s or trust’s share of all
ordinary dividends received during the tax
year.
For the year of the decedent’s death,
Forms 1099-DIV issued in the decedent’s
name may include dividends earned after
the date of death that should be reported
on the income tax return of the
decedent’s estate. When preparing the
decedent’s final income tax return, report
on line 5 of Schedule B (Form 1040) or
Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) the ordinary
dividends shown on Form 1099-DIV.
Under the last entry on line 5, subtotal all
the dividends reported on line 5. Below
the subtotal, write “Form 1041” and the
name and address shown on Form 1041
for the decedent’s estate. Also, show the
part of the ordinary dividends reported on
Form 1041 and subtract it from the
subtotal.
Report capital gain distributions on
TIP Schedule D (Form 1041), line 9.
Line 2b—Qualified Dividends
Enter the beneficiary’s allocable share of
qualified dividends on line 2b(1) and enter
the estate’s or trust’s allocable share on
line 2b(2).
If the estate or trust received qualified
dividends that were derived from income
in respect of a decedent, you must reduce
the amount on line 2b(2) by the portion of
the estate tax deduction claimed on Form
1041, page 1, line 19, that is attributable
to those qualified dividends. Do not
reduce the amounts on line 2b by any
other allocable expenses.
Note. The beneficiary’s share (as figured
above) may differ from the amount
entered on line 2b of Schedule K-1 (Form
1041).
Qualified dividends. Qualified dividends
are eligible for a lower tax rate than other
ordinary income. Generally, these
dividends are reported to the estate or
trust in box 1b of Form(s) 1099-DIV. See
Pub. 550 for the definition of qualified
dividends if the estate or trust received
dividends not reported on Form
1099-DIV.
Exception. Some dividends may be
reported to the estate or trust as qualified
dividends in box 1b of Form 1099-DIV but
are not qualified dividends. These
include:
• Dividends received on any share of
stock that the estate or trust held for less
than 61 days during the 121-day period
that began 60 days before the
ex-dividend date. The ex-dividend date is
the first date following the declaration of a
dividend on which the purchaser of a
stock is not entitled to receive the next
dividend payment. When counting the
number of days the stock was held,
include the day the estate or trust
disposed of the stock but not the day it
acquired the stock. However, you cannot
count certain days during which the
estate’s or trust’s risk of loss was
diminished. See Pub. 550 for more
details.
• Dividends attributable to periods
totaling more than 366 days that the
estate or trust received on any share of
preferred stock held for less than 91 days
during the 181-day period that began 90
days before the ex-dividend date. When
counting the number of days the stock
was held, include the day the estate or
trust disposed of the stock but not the day
it acquired the stock. However, you
cannot count certain days during which
the estate’s or trust’s risk of loss was
diminished. See Pub. 550 for more
details. Preferred dividends attributable to
periods totaling less than 367 days are
subject to the 61-day holding period rule
above.
• Dividends on any share of stock to the
extent that the estate or trust is under an
obligation (including a short sale) to make
related payments with respect to positions
in substantially similar or related property.
• Payments in lieu of dividends, but only
if you know or have reason to know that
the payments are not qualified dividends.
If you have an entry on line 2b(2),
TIP be sure you use Schedule D
(Form 1041), the Schedule D Tax
Worksheet, or the Qualified Dividends
Tax Worksheet, whichever applies, to
figure the estate’s or trust’s tax. Figuring
the estate’s or trust’s tax liability in this
manner will usually result in a lower tax.
Line 3—Business Income or
(Loss)
If the estate operated a business, report
the income and expenses on Schedule C
(Form 1040), Profit or Loss From
Business (or Schedule C-EZ (Form
1040), Net Profit From Business). Enter
the net profit or (loss) from Schedule C
(or Schedule C-EZ) on line 3.
Line 4—Capital Gain or (Loss)
Enter the gain from Schedule D (Form
1041), Part III, line 15, column (3); or the
loss from Part IV, line 16.
!
CAUTION
Do not substitute Schedule D
(Form 1040) for Schedule D (Form
1041).
-15-
Line 5—Rents, Royalties,
Partnerships, Other Estates and
Trusts, etc.
Use Schedule E (Form 1040),
Supplemental Income and Loss, to report
the estate’s or trust’s share of income or
(losses) from rents, royalties,
partnerships, S corporations, other
estates and trusts, and REMICs. Enter
the net profit or (loss) from Schedule E on
line 5. See the instructions for Schedule E
(Form 1040) for reporting requirements.
If the estate or trust received a
Schedule K-1 from a partnership, S
corporation, or other flow-through entity,
use the corresponding lines on Form
1041 to report the interest, dividends,
capital gains, etc., from the flow-through
entity.
Line 6—Farm Income or (Loss)
If the estate or trust operated a farm, use
Schedule F (Form 1040), Profit or Loss
From Farming, to report farm income and
expenses. Enter the net profit or (loss)
from Schedule F on line 6.
Line 7—Ordinary Gain or
(Loss)
Enter from line 17, Form 4797, Sales of
Business Property, the ordinary gain or
loss from the sale or exchange of
property other than capital assets and
also from involuntary conversions (other
than casualty or theft).
Line 8—Other Income
Enter other items of income not included
on lines 1, 2a, and 3 through 7. List the
type and amount on an attached schedule
if the estate or trust has more than one
item.
Items to be reported on line 8 include:
• Unpaid compensation received by the
decedent’s estate that is income in
respect of a decedent, and
• Any part of a total distribution shown on
Form 1099-R, Distributions From
Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or
Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance
Contracts, etc., that is treated as ordinary
income. For more information, see the
separate instructions for Form 4972, Tax
on Lump-Sum Distributions.
Deductions
Depreciation, Depletion, and
Amortization
A trust or decedent’s estate is allowed a
deduction for depreciation, depletion, and
amortization only to the extent the
deductions are not apportioned to the
beneficiaries. An estate or trust is not
allowed to make an election under section
179 to expense certain tangible property.
The estate’s or trust’s share of
depreciation, depletion, and amortization
should be reported on the appropriate
lines of Schedule C (or C-EZ), E, or F
(Form 1040), the net income or loss from
which is shown on line 3, 5, or 6 of Form
1041. If the deduction is not related to a
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specific business or activity, then report it
on line 15a.
Depreciation. For a decedent’s estate,
the depreciation deduction is apportioned
between the estate and the heirs,
legatees, and devisees on the basis of
the estate’s income allocable to each.
For a trust, the depreciation deduction
is apportioned between the income
beneficiaries and the trust on the basis of
the trust income allocable to each, unless
the governing instrument (or local law)
requires or permits the trustee to maintain
a depreciation reserve. If the trustee is
required to maintain a reserve, the
deduction is first allocated to the trust, up
to the amount of the reserve. Any excess
is allocated among the beneficiaries and
the trust in the same manner as the
trust’s accounting income. See
Regulations section 1.167(h)-1(b).
Depletion. For mineral or timber property
held by a decedent’s estate, the depletion
deduction is apportioned between the
estate and the heirs, legatees, and
devisees on the basis of the estate’s
income from such property allocable to
each.
For mineral or timber property held in
trust, the depletion deduction is
apportioned between the income
beneficiaries and the trust based on the
trust income from such property allocable
to each, unless the governing instrument
(or local law) requires or permits the
trustee to maintain a reserve for
depletion. If the trustee is required to
maintain a reserve, the deduction is first
allocated to the trust, up to the amount of
the reserve. Any excess is allocated
among the beneficiaries and the trust in
the same manner as the trust’s
accounting income. See Regulations
section 1.611-1(c)(4).
Amortization. The deduction for
amortization is apportioned between an
estate or trust and its beneficiaries under
the same principles for apportioning the
deductions for depreciation and depletion.
The deduction for the amortization of
reforestation expenditures under section
194 is allowed only to an estate.
Allocation of Deductions for
Tax-Exempt Income
Generally, no deduction that would
otherwise be allowable is allowed for any
expense (whether for business or for the
production of income) that is allocable to
tax-exempt income. Examples of
tax-exempt income include:
• Certain death benefits (section 101),
• Interest on state or local bonds (section
103),
• Compensation for injuries or sickness
(section 104), and
• Income from discharge of indebtedness
in a title 11 case (section 108).
Exception. State income taxes and
business expenses that are allocable to
tax-exempt interest are deductible.
Expenses that are directly allocable to
tax-exempt income are allocated only to
tax-exempt income. A reasonable
proportion of expenses indirectly allocable
to both tax-exempt income and other
income must be allocated to each class of
income.
Deductions That May Be
Allowable for Estate Tax
Purposes
Administration expenses and casualty
and theft losses deductible on Form 706
may be deducted, to the extent otherwise
deductible for income tax purposes, on
Form 1041 if the fiduciary files a
statement waiving the right to deduct the
expenses and losses on Form 706. The
statement must be filed before the
expiration of the statutory period of
limitations for the tax year the deduction
is claimed. See Pub. 559 for more
information.
Accrued Expenses
Generally, an accrual basis taxpayer can
deduct accrued expenses in the tax year
that: (a) all events have occurred that
determine the liability; and (b) the amount
of the liability can be figured with
reasonable accuracy. However, all the
events that establish liability are treated
as occurring only when economic
performance takes place. There are
exceptions for recurring items. See
section 461(h).
distribution is increased by the passive
activity losses allocable to the interest,
and such losses cannot be deducted. See
section 469(j)(12).
Losses from passive activities are
TIP first subject to the at-risk rules.
When the losses are deductible
under the at-risk rules, the passive activity
rules then apply.
Rental activities. Generally, rental
activities are passive activities, whether or
not the taxpayer materially participates.
However, certain taxpayers who
materially participate in real property
trades or businesses are not subject to
the passive activity limitations on losses
from rental real estate activities in which
they materially participate. For more
details, see section 469(c)(7).
For tax years of an estate ending less
than 2 years after the decedent’s date of
death, up to $25,000 of deductions and
deduction equivalents of credits from
rental real estate activities in which the
decedent actively participated are
allowed. Any excess losses and/or credits
are suspended for the year and carried
forward.
At-Risk Loss Limitations
Portfolio income. Portfolio income is not
treated as income from a passive activity,
and passive losses and credits generally
may not be applied to offset it. Portfolio
income generally includes interest,
dividends, royalties, and income from
annuities. Portfolio income of an estate or
trust must be accounted for separately.
Generally, the amount the estate or trust
has “at-risk” limits the loss it can deduct
for any tax year. Use Form 6198, At-Risk
Limitations, to figure the deductible loss
for the year and file it with Form 1041. For
more information, see Pub. 925, Passive
Activity and At-Risk Rules.
Forms to file. See Form 8582, Passive
Activity Loss Limitations, to figure the
amount of losses allowed from passive
activities. See Form 8582-CR, Passive
Activity Credit Limitations, to figure the
amount of credit allowed for the current
year.
Passive Activity Loss and
Credit Limitations
Transactions Between Related
Taxpayers
In general. Section 469 and the
regulations thereunder generally limit
losses from passive activities to the
amount of income derived from all
passive activities. Similarly, credits from
passive activities are generally limited to
the tax attributable to such activities.
These limitations are first applied at the
estate or trust level.
Generally, an activity is a passive
activity if it involves the conduct of any
trade or business, and the taxpayer does
not materially participate in the activity.
Passive activities do not include working
interests in oil and gas properties. See
section 469(c)(3).
Note. Material participation standards for
estates and trusts have not been
established by regulations.
Under section 267, a trust that uses the
accrual method of accounting may only
deduct business expenses and interest
owed to a related party in the year the
payment is included in the income of the
related party. For this purpose, a related
party includes:
1. A grantor and a fiduciary of any
trust;
2. A fiduciary of a trust and a fiduciary
of another trust, if the same person is a
grantor of both trusts;
3. A fiduciary of a trust and a
beneficiary of such trust;
4. A fiduciary of a trust and a
beneficiary of another trust, if the same
person is a grantor of both trusts;
5. A fiduciary of a trust and a
corporation more than 50% in value of the
outstanding stock of which is owned,
directly or indirectly, by or for the trust or
by or for a person who is a grantor of the
trust; and
6. An executor of an estate and a
beneficiary of that estate, except for a
sale or exchange to satisfy a pecuniary
Limitations on Deductions
For a grantor trust, material
participation is determined at the grantor
level.
If the estate or trust distributes an
interest in a passive activity, the basis of
the property immediately before the
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bequest (that is a bequest of a sum of
money).
2% floor on miscellaneous itemized
deductions.
Line 10—Interest
The amount of the investment interest
deduction may be limited. Use Form
4952, Investment Interest Expense
Deduction, to figure the allowable
investment interest deduction.
Enter the amount of interest (subject to
limitations) paid or incurred by the estate
or trust on amounts borrowed by the
estate or trust, or on debt acquired by the
estate or trust (for example, outstanding
obligations from the decedent) that is not
claimed elsewhere on the return.
If the proceeds of a loan were used for
more than one purpose (for example, to
purchase a portfolio investment and to
acquire an interest in a passive activity),
the fiduciary must make an interest
allocation according to the rules in
Temporary Regulations section 1.163-8T.
Do not include interest paid on
indebtedness incurred or continued to
purchase or carry obligations on which
the interest is wholly exempt from income
tax.
Personal interest is not deductible.
Examples of personal interest include
interest paid on:
• Revolving charge accounts used to
purchase personal use property;
• Personal notes for money borrowed
from a bank, credit union, or other person;
• Installment loans on personal use
property; and
• Underpayments of federal, state, or
local income taxes.
Interest that is paid or incurred on
indebtedness allocable to a trade or
business (including a rental activity)
should be deducted on the appropriate
line of Schedule C (or C-EZ), E, or F
(Form 1040), the net income or loss from
which is shown on line 3, 5, or 6 of Form
1041.
Types of interest to include on line 10
are:
1. Any investment interest (subject to
limitations — see below);
2. Any qualified residence interest
(see later); and
3. Any interest payable under section
6601 on any unpaid portion of the estate
tax attributable to the value of a
reversionary or remainder interest in
property for the period during which an
extension of time for payment of such tax
is in effect.
Investment interest. Generally,
investment interest is interest (including
amortizable bond premium on taxable
bonds acquired after October 22, 1986,
but before January 1, 1988) that is paid or
incurred on indebtedness that is properly
allocable to property held for investment.
Investment interest does not include any
qualified residence interest, or interest
that is taken into account under section
469 in figuring income or loss from a
passive activity.
Generally, net investment income is
the excess of investment income over
investment expenses. Investment
expenses are those expenses (other than
interest) allowable after application of the
If you must complete Form 4952,
check the box on line 10 of Form 1041
and attach Form 4952. Then, add the
deductible investment interest to the other
types of deductible interest and enter the
total on line 10.
Qualified residence interest. Interest
paid or incurred by an estate or trust on
indebtedness secured by a qualified
residence of a beneficiary of an estate or
trust is treated as qualified residence
interest if the residence would be a
qualified residence (that is, the principal
residence or the second residence
selected by the beneficiary) if owned by
the beneficiary. The beneficiary must
have a present interest in the estate or
trust or an interest in the residuary of the
estate or trust. See Pub. 936, Home
Mortgage Interest Deduction, for an
explanation of the general rules for
deducting home mortgage interest.
See section 163(h)(3) for a definition of
qualified residence interest and for
limitations on indebtedness.
Line 11—Taxes
Enter any deductible taxes paid or
incurred during the tax year that are not
deductible elsewhere on Form 1041.
Deductible taxes include the following.
• State and local income taxes. You can
deduct state and local income taxes
unless you elect to deduct state and local
general sales taxes. You cannot deduct
both.
• State and local general sales taxes.
You can elect to deduct state and local
general sales taxes instead of state and
local income taxes. Generally, you can
elect to deduct the actual state and local
general sales taxes (including
compensating use taxes) you paid in
2006 if the tax rate was the same as the
general sales tax rate. However, sales
taxes on food, clothing, medical supplies,
and motor vehicles are deductible as a
general sales tax even if the tax rate was
less than the general sales tax rate. Sales
taxes on motor vehicles are also
deductible as a general sales tax if the tax
rate was more than the general sales tax
rate, but the tax is deductible only up to
the amount of tax that would have been
imposed at the general sales tax rate.
Motor vehicles include cars, motorcycles,
motor homes, recreational vehicles, sport
utility vehicles, trucks, vans, and off-road
vehicles. Also include any state and local
general sales taxes paid for a leased
motor vehicle. Do not include sales taxes
paid on items used in a trade or business.
An estate or trust cannot use the
Optional Sales Tax Tables for individuals
in Pub. 600, State and Local General
Sales Taxes, to figure its deduction.
-17-
• State, local, and foreign real property
taxes.
• State and local personal property
taxes.
• Foreign or U.S. possession income
taxes. You may want to take a credit for
the tax instead of a deduction. See the
instructions for Schedule G, line 2a, on
page 23 for more details.
• The generation-skipping transfer (GST)
tax imposed on income distributions.
Do not deduct:
• Federal income taxes;
• Estate, inheritance, legacy, succession,
and gift taxes; or
• Federal duties and excise taxes.
Line 12—Fiduciary Fees
Enter the deductible fees paid or incurred
to the fiduciary for administering the
estate or trust during the tax year.
Fiduciary fees deducted on Form
TIP 706 cannot be deducted on
Form 1041.
Line 15a—Other Deductions
Not Subject to the 2% Floor
Attach your own schedule, listing by type
and amount, all allowable deductions that
are not deductible elsewhere on Form
1041.
Do not include any losses on worthless
bonds and similar obligations and
nonbusiness bad debts. Report these
losses on Schedule D (Form 1041).
Do not deduct medical or funeral
expenses on Form 1041. Medical
expenses of the decedent paid by the
estate may be deductible on the
decedent’s income tax return for the year
incurred. See section 213(c). Funeral
expenses are deductible only on Form
706.
The following are examples of
deductions that are reported on line 15a.
Bond premium(s). For taxable bonds
acquired before October 23, 1986, if the
fiduciary elected to amortize the premium,
report the amortization on this line. You
cannot deduct the amortization for
tax-exempt bonds. In all cases where the
fiduciary has made an election to
amortize the premium, the basis must be
reduced by the amount of amortization.
For more information, see section 171
and Pub. 550.
If you claim a bond premium deduction
for the estate or trust, figure the deduction
on a separate sheet and attach it to
Form 1041.
Casualty and theft losses. Use Form
4684, Casualties and Thefts, to figure any
deductible casualty and theft losses.
Domestic production activities
deduction. The estate or trust may be
able to deduct up to 3% of its share of
qualified production activities income
(QPAI) from the following activities.
1. Construction performed in the
United States.
2. Engineering or architectural
services performed in the United States
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for construction projects in the United
States.
3. Any lease, rental, license, sale,
exchange, or other disposition of:
a. Tangible personal property,
computer software, and sound recordings
that the estate or trust manufactured,
produced, grew, or extracted in whole or
in significant part within the United States;
b. Any qualified film the estate or trust
produced; or
c. Electricity, natural gas, or potable
water the estate or trust produced in the
United States.
In certain cases, the United States
includes the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico.
The deduction does not apply to
income derived from:
• The sale of food and beverages the
estate or trust prepared at a retail
establishment;
• Property the estate or trust leased,
licensed, or rented for use by any related
person; or
• The transmission or distribution of
electricity, natural gas, or potable water.
The deduction cannot exceed 3% of
modified AGI or 50% of certain Form W-2
wages. QPAI, as well as Form W-2
wages, must be apportioned between the
trust or estate and its beneficiaries. For
more details, see Form 8903, Domestic
Production Activities Deduction, and its
separate instructions.
Net operating loss deduction (NOLD).
An estate or trust is allowed the net
operating loss deduction (NOLD) under
section 172.
If you claim an NOLD for the estate or
trust, figure the deduction on a separate
sheet and attach it to this return.
Estate’s or trust’s share of
amortization, depreciation, and
depletion not claimed elsewhere. If you
cannot deduct the amortization,
depreciation, and depletion as rent or
royalty expenses on Schedule E (Form
1040), or as business or farm expenses
on Schedule C, C-EZ, or F (Form 1040),
itemize the fiduciary’s share of the
deductions on an attached sheet and
include them on line 15a. Itemize each
beneficiary’s share of the deductions and
report them in the appropriate box of
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041).
Line 15b—Allowable
Miscellaneous Itemized
Deductions Subject to the 2%
Floor
Miscellaneous itemized deductions are
deductible only to the extent that the
aggregate amount of such deductions
exceeds 2% of adjusted gross income
(AGI).
Among the miscellaneous itemized
deductions that must be included on line
15b are expenses for the production or
collection of income under section 212,
such as investment advisory fees,
subscriptions to investment advisory
publications, and the cost of safe deposit
boxes.
Miscellaneous itemized deductions do
not include deductions for:
• Interest under section 163,
• Taxes under section 164,
• The amortization of bond premium
under section 171,
• Estate taxes attributable to income in
respect of a decedent under section
691(c), or
• Expenses paid or incurred in
connection with the administration of the
estate or trust that would not have been
incurred if the property were not held in
the estate or trust.
For other exceptions, see section
67(b).
How to figure AGI for estates and
trusts. You figure AGI by subtracting the
following from total income on line 9 of
page 1:
1. The administration costs of the
estate or trust (the total of lines 12, 14,
and 15a to the extent they are costs
incurred in the administration of the estate
or trust) that would not have been
incurred if the property were not held by
the estate or trust;
2. The income distribution deduction
(line 18);
3. The amount of the exemption (line
20);
4. The domestic production activities
deduction claimed on line 15a; and
5. The net operating loss deduction
claimed on line 15a.
For those estates and trusts whose
income distribution deduction is limited to
the actual distribution, and not the DNI
(that is, the income distribution is less
than the DNI), when computing the AGI,
use the amount of the actual distribution.
For those estates and trusts whose
income distribution deduction is limited to
the DNI (that is, the actual distribution
exceeds the DNI), the DNI must be
figured taking into account the allowable
miscellaneous itemized deductions
(AMID) after application of the 2% floor. In
this situation there are two unknown
amounts: (a) the AMID; and (b) the DNI.
Computing line 15b. To compute line
15b, use the equation below:
AMID = Total miscellaneous itemized
deductions – (.02(AGI))
The following example illustrates how
algebraic equations can be used to solve
for these unknown amounts.
Example. The Malcolm Smith Trust, a
complex trust, earned $20,000 of dividend
income, $20,000 of capital gains, and a
fully deductible $5,000 loss from XYZ
partnership (chargeable to corpus) in
2006. The trust instrument provides that
capital gains are added to corpus. 50% of
the fiduciary fees are allocated to income
and 50% to corpus. The trust claimed a
$2,000 deduction on line 12 of Form
1041. The trust incurred $1,500 of
miscellaneous itemized deductions
-18-
(chargeable to income), which are subject
to the 2% floor. There are no other
deductions. The trustee made a
discretionary distribution of the
accounting income of $17,500 to the
trust’s sole beneficiary.
Because the actual distribution can
reasonably be expected to exceed the
DNI, the trust must figure the DNI, taking
into account the allowable miscellaneous
itemized deductions, to determine the
amount to enter on line 15b.
The trust also claims an exemption of
$100 on line 20.
Using the facts in this example:
AMID = 1,500 – (.02(AGI))
In all situations, use the following
equation to compute the AGI:
AGI = (line 9) – (the total of lines 12,
14, and 15a to the extent they are costs
incurred in the administration of the estate
or trust that would not have been incurred
if the property were not held by the estate
or trust) – (line 18) – (line 20).
Note. There are no other deductions
claimed by the trust on line 15a that are
deductible in arriving at AGI.
Figuring AGI in this example, we get:
AGI = 35,000 – 2,000 – DNI – 100
Since the value of line 18 is not known
because it is limited to the DNI, you are
left with the following:
AGI = 32,900 – DNI
Substitute the value of AGI in the
equation:
AMID = 1,500 – (.02(32,900 – DNI))
The equation cannot be solved until
the value of DNI is known. The DNI can
be expressed in terms of the AMID. To do
this, compute the DNI using the known
values. In this example, the DNI is equal
to the total income of the trust (less any
capital gains allocated to corpus; or plus
any capital loss from line 4); less total
deductions from line 16 (excluding any
miscellaneous itemized deductions); less
the AMID.
Thus, DNI = (line 9) – (line 15, column
(2) of Schedule D (Form 1041)) – (line
16) – (AMID)
Substitute the known values:
DNI = 35,000 – 20,000 – 2,000 –
AMID
DNI = 13,000 – AMID
Substitute the value of DNI in the
equation to solve for AMID:
AMID = 1,500 – (.02(32,900 – (13,000
– AMID)))
AMID = 1,500 – (.02(32,900 – 13,000
+ AMID))
AMID = 1,500 – (658 – 260 +
.02AMID)
AMID = 1,102 – .02AMID
1.02AMID = 1,102
AMID = 1,080
DNI = 11,920 (i.e., 13,000 – 1,080)
AGI = 20,980 (i.e., 32,900 – 11,920)
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Note. The income distribution deduction
is equal to the smaller of the distribution
($17,500) or the DNI ($11,920).
Enter the value of AMID on line 15b
(the DNI should equal line 7 of Schedule
B) and complete the rest of Form 1041
according to the instructions.
If the 2% floor is more than the
deductions subject to the 2% floor, no
deductions are allowed.
Line 18—Income Distribution
Deduction
If the estate or trust was required to
distribute income currently or if it paid,
credited, or was required to distribute any
other amounts to beneficiaries during the
tax year, complete Schedule B to
determine the estate’s or trust’s income
distribution deduction. However, if you are
filing for a pooled income fund, do not
complete Schedule B. Instead, attach a
statement to support the computation of
the income distribution deduction.
If the estate or trust claims an income
distribution deduction, complete and
attach:
• Part I (through line 26) and Part II of
Schedule I to refigure the deduction on a
minimum tax basis, and
• Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) for each
beneficiary to which a distribution was
made or required to be made.
Cemetery perpetual care fund. On line
18, deduct the amount, not more than $5
per gravesite, paid for maintenance of
cemetery property. To the right of the
entry space for line 18, enter the number
of gravesites. Also write “Section 642(i)
trust” in parentheses after the trust’s
name at the top of Form 1041. You do not
have to complete Schedules B of Form
1041 and K-1 (Form 1041).
Do not enter less than zero on line 18.
Line 19—Estate Tax Deduction
(Including Certain GenerationSkipping Transfer Taxes)
If the estate or trust includes income in
respect of a decedent (IRD) in its gross
income, and such amount was included in
the decedent’s gross estate for estate tax
purposes, the estate or trust is allowed to
deduct in the same tax year that the
income is included, that portion of the
estate tax imposed on the decedent’s
estate that is attributable to the inclusion
of the IRD in the decedent’s estate. For
an example of the computation, see
Regulations section 1.691(c)-1 and Pub.
559.
If any amount properly paid, credited,
or required to be distributed by an estate
or trust to a beneficiary consists of IRD
received by the estate or trust, do not
include such amounts in determining the
estate tax deduction for the estate or
trust. Figure the deduction on a separate
sheet. Attach the sheet to your return.
If you claim a deduction for estate
tax attributable to qualified
CAUTION dividends or capital gains, you
may have to adjust the amount on Form
1041, page 1, line 2b(2), or Schedule D,
line 18.
Also, a deduction is allowed for the
GST tax imposed as a result of a taxable
termination or a direct skip occurring as a
result of the death of the transferor. See
section 691(c)(3). Enter the estate’s or
trust’s share of these deductions on
line 19.
!
Trusts required to distribute all income
currently. 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.
Qualified disability trusts. A qualified
disability trust is allowed a $3,300
exemption if the trust’s modified AGI is
less than or equal to $150,500. If its
modified AGI exceeds $150,500,
complete the worksheet below to figure
the amount of the trust’s exemption. To
figure modified AGI, follow the
instructions for figuring AGI for line 15b
on page 18, except use zero as the
amount of the trust’s exemption when
figuring AGI.
A qualified disability trust is any trust:
1. Described in 42 U.S.C.
1396p(c)(2)(B)(iv) and established solely
for the benefit of an individual under 65
years of age who is disabled, and
2. All of the beneficiaries of which are
determined by the Commissioner of
Social Security to have been disabled for
some part of the tax year within the
meaning of 42 U.S.C. 1382c(a)(3).
A trust will not fail to meet 2 above just
because the trust’s corpus may revert to a
person who is not disabled after the trust
ceases to have any disabled
beneficiaries.
All other trusts. A trust not described
above is allowed a $100 exemption.
Tax and Payments
Line 20—Exemption
Line 22—Taxable Income
Decedents’ estates. A decedent’s estate
is allowed a $600 exemption.
Minimum taxable income. Line 22
cannot be less than the larger of:
Exemption Worksheet for Qualified Disability Trusts Only—Line 20
Note: If the trust’s modified AGI* is less than or equal to $150,500, enter $3,300 on Form 1041, line 20.
Otherwise, complete the worksheet below to figure the trust’s exemption.
1. Maximum exemption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.
2. Enter the trust’s modified AGI* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.
3. Threshold amount . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.
$150,500
4. Subtract line 3 from line 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.
Note: If line 4 is more than $122,500, enter $1,100 on line 9 below. Do not complete lines 5
through 8.
5. Divide line 4 by $2,500. If the result is not a whole number, increase it to the next higher
whole number (for example, increase 0.0004 to 1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.
6. Multiply line 5 by 2% (.02) and enter the result as a decimal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.
7. Multiply line 1 by line 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.
8. Divide line 7 by 1.5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.
9. Exemption. Subtract line 8 from line 1. Enter the result here and on Form 1041, line 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.
*Figure the trust’s modified AGI in the same manner as AGI is figured in the line 15b instructions on page 18,
except use zero when figuring the amount of the trust’s exemption.
-19-
$3,300
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• The inversion gain of the estate or
trust, as figured under section 7874, if the
estate or trust is an expatriated entity or a
partner in an expatriated entity, or
• The sum of the excess inclusions of the
estate or trust from Schedule Q (Form
1066), line 2c.
Net operating loss. If line 22 (figured
without regard to the minimum taxable
income rule stated above) is a loss, the
estate or trust may have a net operating
loss (NOL). Do not include the deductions
claimed on lines 13, 18, and 20 when
figuring the amount of the NOL.
Generally, an NOL may be carried
back to the prior 2 tax years (3 years to
the extent the loss is an eligible loss; 5
years to the extent the loss is a farming
loss; 10 years to the extent the loss is a
specified liability loss). An estate or trust
may also elect to carry an NOL forward
only, instead of first carrying it back. For
more information, see the Instructions for
Form 1045.
Complete Schedule A of Form 1045,
Application for Tentative Refund, to figure
the amount of the NOL that is available
for carryback or carryover. Use Form
1045 or file an amended return to apply
for a refund based on an NOL carryback.
For more details, see Pub. 536, Net
Operating Losses (NOLs) for Individuals,
Estates, and Trusts.
On the termination of the estate or
trust, any unused NOL carryover that
would be allowable to the estate or trust
in a later tax year, but for the termination,
is allowed to the beneficiaries succeeding
to the property of the estate or trust. See
the instructions for Schedule K-1, box 11,
codes D and E.
Excess deductions on termination. If
the estate or trust has for its final year
deductions (excluding the charitable
deduction and exemption) in excess of its
gross income, the excess is allowed as
an itemized deduction to the beneficiaries
succeeding to the property of the estate
or trust.
In general, an unused NOL carryover
that is allowed to beneficiaries (as
explained above) cannot also be treated
as an excess deduction. However, if the
final year of the estate or trust is also the
last year of the NOL carryover period, the
NOL carryover not absorbed in that tax
year by the estate or trust is included as
an excess deduction. See the instructions
for Schedule K-1, box 11, code A.
Line 24a—2006 Estimated Tax
Payments and Amount Applied
From 2005 Return
Enter the amount of any estimated tax
payment you made with Form 1041-ES
for 2006 plus the amount of any
overpayment from the 2005 return that
was applied to the 2006 estimated tax.
If the estate or trust is the beneficiary
of another trust and received a payment
of estimated tax that was credited to the
trust (as reflected on the Schedule K-1
issued to the trust), then report this
amount separately with the notation
“section 643(g)” in the space next to line
24a and include this amount in the
amount entered on line 24a.
Do not include on Form 1041
estimated tax paid by an individual
CAUTION before death. Instead, include
those payments on the decedent’s final
income tax return.
!
Line 24b—Estimated Tax
Payments Allocated to
Beneficiaries
The trustee (or executor, for the final year
of the estate) may elect under section
643(g) to have any portion of its
estimated tax treated as a payment of
estimated tax made by a beneficiary or
beneficiaries. The election is made on
Form 1041-T, Allocation of Estimated Tax
Payments to Beneficiaries, which must be
filed by the 65th day after the close of the
trust’s tax year. Form 1041-T shows the
amounts to be allocated to each
beneficiary. This amount is reported on
the beneficiary’s Schedule K-1, box 13,
using code A.
Attach Form 1041-T to your return only
if you have not yet filed it; however,
attaching Form 1041-T to Form 1041
does not extend the due date for filing
Form 1041-T. If you have already filed
Form 1041-T, do not attach a copy to
your return.
Failure to file Form 1041-T by the
due date (March 6, 2007, for
CAUTION calendar year estates and trusts)
will result in an invalid election. An invalid
election will require the filing of amended
Schedules K-1 for each beneficiary who
was allocated a payment of estimated tax.
!
Line 24d—Tax Paid With
Form 7004
If you filed Form 7004 to request an
extension of time to file Form 1041, enter
the amount that you paid with the
extension request.
Line 24e—Federal Income Tax
Withheld
Use line 24e to claim a credit for any
federal income tax withheld (and not
repaid) by: (a) an employer on wages and
salaries of a decedent received by the
decedent’s estate; (b) a payer of certain
gambling winnings (for example, state
lottery winnings); or (c) a payer of
distributions from pensions, annuities,
retirement or profit-sharing plans, IRAs,
insurance contracts, etc., received by a
decedent’s estate or trust. Attach a copy
of Form W-2, Form W-2G, or Form
1099-R to the front of the return.
Except for backup withholding (as
explained below), withheld income
CAUTION tax may not be passed through to
beneficiaries on either Schedule K-1 or
Form 1041-T.
Backup withholding. If the estate or
trust received a 2006 Form 1099 showing
federal income tax withheld (that is,
backup withholding) on interest income,
!
-20-
dividends, or other income, check the box
and include the amount withheld on
income retained by the estate or trust in
the total for line 24e.
Report on Schedule K-1 (Form 1041),
box 13, using code B, any credit for
backup withholding on income distributed
to the beneficiary.
Line 24f—Credit for Federal
Telephone Excise Tax Paid
If the estate or trust was billed after
February 28, 2003, and before August 1,
2006, for the federal telephone excise tax
on long distance or bundled service, the
estate or trust may be able to request a
credit for the tax paid. The estate or trust
had bundled service if its local and long
distance service was provided under a
plan that does not separately state the
charge for local service. The estate or
trust cannot request the credit if it has
already received a credit or refund from
its service provider. If the estate or trust
requests the credit, it cannot ask its
service provider for a credit or refund and
must withdraw any request previously
submitted to its provider.
The estate or trust can request the
credit by attaching Form 8913, Credit for
Federal Telephone Excise Tax Paid,
showing the actual amount the estate or
trust paid. The entity also may be able to
request the credit based on an estimate
of the amount paid. See Form 8913 for
details. In either case, the entity must
keep records to substantiate the amount
of the credit requested.
Line 24g—Credit For Tax Paid
on Undistributed Capital Gains
Attach Copy B of Form 2439, Notice to
Shareholder of Undistributed Long-Term
Capital Gains.
Line 24h—Credit for Federal
Tax on Fuels
Enter any credit for federal excise taxes
paid on fuels that are ultimately used for
nontaxable purposes (for example, an
off-highway business use). Attach Form
4136, Credit for Federal Tax Paid on
Fuels. See Pub. 510, Excise Taxes for
2006, for more information.
Line 26—Estimated Tax Penalty
If line 27 is at least $1,000 and more than
10% of the tax shown on Form 1041, or
the estate or trust underpaid its 2006
estimated tax liability for any payment
period, it may owe a penalty. See Form
2210 to determine whether the estate or
trust owes a penalty and to figure the
amount of the penalty.
Note. The penalty may be waived under
certain conditions. See Pub. 505, Tax
Withholding and Estimated Tax, for
details.
Line 27—Tax Due
You must pay the tax in full when the
return is filed. Make the check or money
order payable to the “United States
Treasury.” Write the EIN and “2006 Form
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1041” on the payment. Enclose, but do
not attach, the payment with Form 1041.
You may use EFTPS to pay the
TIP tax due for a trust. See Electronic
Deposits on page 8.
Line 29a—Credited to 2007
Estimated Tax
Enter the amount from line 28 that you
want applied to the estate’s or trust’s
2007 estimated tax.
Schedule A—Charitable
Deduction
General Instructions
Generally, any part of the gross income of
an estate or trust (other than a simple
trust) that, under the terms of the will or
governing instrument, is paid (or treated
as paid) during the tax year for a
charitable purpose specified in section
170(c) is allowed as a deduction to the
estate or trust. It is not necessary that the
charitable organization be created or
organized in the United States.
A pooled income fund, a nonexempt
charitable trust treated as a private
foundation, or a trust with unrelated
business income should attach a
separate sheet to Form 1041 instead of
using Schedule A of Form 1041 to figure
the charitable deduction.
Additional return to be filed by trusts.
Trusts that claim a charitable deduction
must also file Form 1041-A. See Form
1041-A for exceptions.
Election to treat contributions as paid
in the prior tax year. The fiduciary of an
estate or trust may elect to treat as paid
during the tax year any amount of gross
income received during that tax year or
any prior tax year that was paid in the
next tax year for a charitable purpose.
For example, if a calendar year estate
or trust makes a qualified charitable
contribution on February 7, 2007, from
income earned in 2006 or prior, then the
fiduciary can elect to treat the contribution
as paid in 2006.
To make the election, the fiduciary
must file a statement with Form 1041 for
the tax year in which the contribution is
treated as paid. This statement must
include:
1. The name and address of the
fiduciary;
2. The name of the estate or trust;
3. An indication that the fiduciary is
making an election under section
642(c)(1) for contributions treated as paid
during such tax year;
4. The name and address of each
organization to which any such
contribution is paid; and
5. The amount of each contribution
and date of actual payment or, if
applicable, the total amount of
contributions paid to each organization
during the next tax year, to be treated as
paid in the prior tax year.
The election must be filed by the due
date (including extensions) for Form 1041
for the next tax year. If the original return
was filed on time, you may make the
election on an amended return filed no
later than 6 months after the due date of
the return (excluding extensions). Write
“Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2” at
the top of the amended return and file it at
the same address you used for your
original return.
For more information about the
charitable deduction, see section 642(c)
and related regulations.
Specific Instructions
Line 1—Amounts Paid or
Permanently Set Aside for
Charitable Purposes From Gross
Income
Enter amounts that were paid for a
charitable purpose out of the estate’s or
trust’s gross income, including any capital
gains that are attributable to income
under the governing instrument or local
law. Include amounts paid during the tax
year from gross income received in a
prior tax year, but only if no deduction
was allowed for any prior tax year for
these amounts.
Estates, and certain trusts, may claim
a deduction for amounts permanently set
aside for a charitable purpose from gross
income. Such amounts must be
permanently set aside during the tax year
to be used exclusively for religious,
charitable, scientific, literary, or
educational purposes, or for the
prevention of cruelty to children or
animals, or for the establishment,
acquisition, maintenance, or operation of
a public cemetery not operated for profit.
For a trust to qualify, the trust may not
be a simple trust, and the set aside
amounts must be required by the terms of
a trust instrument that was created on or
before October 9, 1969.
Further, the trust instrument must
provide for an irrevocable remainder
interest to be transferred to or for the use
of an organization described in section
170(c); or the trust must have been
created by a grantor who was at all times
after October 9, 1969, under a mental
disability to change the terms of the trust.
Also, certain testamentary trusts that
were established by a will that was
executed on or before October 9, 1969,
may qualify. See Regulations section
1.642(c)-2(b).
Do not include any capital gains for the
tax year allocated to corpus and paid or
permanently set aside for charitable
purposes. Instead, enter these amounts
on line 4.
Line 2—Tax-Exempt Income
Allocable to Charitable
Contributions
Any estate or trust that pays or sets aside
any part of its income for a charitable
purpose must reduce the deduction by
-21-
the portion allocable to any tax-exempt
income. If the governing instrument
specifically provides as to the source from
which amounts are paid, permanently set
aside, or to be used for charitable
purposes, the specific provisions control.
In all other cases, determine the amount
of tax-exempt income allocable to
charitable contributions by multiplying line
1 by a fraction, the numerator of which is
the total tax-exempt income of the estate
or trust, and the denominator of which is
the gross income of the estate or trust. Do
not include in the denominator any losses
allocated to corpus.
Line 4—Capital Gains for the Tax
Year Allocated to Corpus and Paid
or Permanently Set Aside for
Charitable Purposes
Enter the total of all capital gains for the
tax year that are:
• Allocated to corpus, and
• Paid or permanently set aside for
charitable purposes.
Line 6—Section 1202 Exclusion
Allocable to Capital Gains Paid or
Permanently Set Aside for
Charitable Purposes
If the exclusion of gain from the sale or
exchange of qualified small business
stock was claimed, enter the part of the
gain included on Schedule A, lines 1 and
4, that was excluded under section 1202.
Schedule B—Income
Distribution Deduction
General Instructions
If the estate or trust was required to
distribute income currently or if it paid,
credited, or was required to distribute any
other amounts to beneficiaries during the
tax year, complete Schedule B to
determine the estate’s or trust’s income
distribution deduction.
Note. Use Schedule I to compute the
DNI and income distribution deduction on
a minimum tax basis.
Pooled income funds. Do not complete
Schedule B for these funds. Instead,
attach a separate statement to support
the computation of the income distribution
deduction. See Pooled Income Funds on
page 7 for more information.
Separate share rule. If a single trust or
an estate has more than one beneficiary,
and if different beneficiaries have
substantially separate and independent
shares, their shares are treated as
separate trusts or estates for the sole
purpose of determining the DNI allocable
to the respective beneficiaries.
If the separate share rule applies,
figure the DNI allocable to each
beneficiary on a separate sheet and
attach the sheet to this return. Any
deduction or loss that is applicable solely
to one separate share of the trust or
estate is not available to any other share
of the same trust or estate.
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For more information, see section
663(c) and related regulations.
Withholding of tax on foreign persons.
The fiduciary may be liable for withholding
tax on distributions to beneficiaries who
are foreign persons. For more
information, see Pub. 515, Withholding of
Tax on Nonresident Aliens and Foreign
Entities, and Forms 1042 and 1042-S.
Specific Instructions
Line 1—Adjusted Total Income
Generally, enter on line 1, Schedule B,
the amount from line 17 on page 1 of
Form 1041. However, if both line 4 and
line 17 on page 1 of Form 1041 are
losses, enter on line 1, Schedule B, the
smaller of those losses. If line 4 is zero or
a gain and line 17 is a loss, enter zero on
line 1, Schedule B.
If you are filing for a simple trust,
subtract from adjusted total income any
extraordinary dividends or taxable stock
dividends included on page 1, line 2, and
determined under the governing
instrument and applicable local law to be
allocable to corpus.
Line 2—Adjusted Tax-Exempt
Interest
To figure the adjusted tax-exempt
interest:
Step 1. Add tax-exempt interest
income on line 2 of Schedule A, any
expenses allowable under section 212
allocable to tax-exempt interest, and any
interest expense allocable to tax-exempt
interest.
Step 2. Subtract the Step 1 total from
the amount of tax-exempt interest
(including exempt-interest dividends)
received.
Section 212 expenses that are directly
allocable to tax-exempt interest are
allocated only to tax-exempt interest. A
reasonable proportion of section 212
expenses that are indirectly allocable to
both tax-exempt interest and other
income must be allocated to each class of
income.
Figure the interest expense allocable
to tax-exempt interest according to the
guidelines in Rev. Proc. 72-18, 1972-1
C.B. 740.
See Regulations sections 1.643(a)-5
and 1.265-1 for more information.
Line 3
Include all capital gains, whether or not
distributed, that are attributable to income
under the governing instrument or local
law. For example, if the trustee distributed
50% of the current year’s capital gains to
the income beneficiaries (and reflects this
amount in column (1), line 15 of Schedule
D (Form 1041)), but under the governing
instrument all capital gains are
attributable to income, then include 100%
of the capital gains on line 3. If the
amount on Schedule D (Form 1041), line
15, column (1) is a net loss, enter zero.
If the exclusion of gain from the sale or
exchange of qualified small business
stock was claimed, do not reduce the
gain on line 3 by any amount excluded
under section 1202.
Line 10—Other Amounts Paid,
Credited, or Otherwise Required
To Be Distributed
Line 5
Line 10 is to be completed only by a
decedent’s estate or complex trust. These
distributions consist of any other amounts
paid, credited, or required to be
distributed and are referred to as second
tier distributions. Such amounts include
annuities to the extent not paid out of
income, mandatory and discretionary
distributions of corpus, and distributions
of property in kind.
If Form 1041-T was timely filed to elect
to treat estimated tax payments as made
by a beneficiary, the payments are
treated as paid or credited to the
beneficiary on the last day of the tax year
and must be included on line 10.
Unless a section 643(e)(3) election is
made, the value of all noncash property
actually paid, credited, or required to be
distributed to any beneficiaries is the
smaller of:
1. The estate’s or trust’s adjusted
basis in the property immediately before
distribution, plus any gain or minus any
loss recognized by the estate or trust on
the distribution (basis of beneficiary), or
2. The fair market value (FMV) of
such property.
In figuring the amount of long-term and
short-term capital gain for the tax year
included on Schedule A, line 1, the
specific provisions of the governing
instrument control if the instrument
specifically provides as to the source from
which amounts are paid, permanently set
aside, or to be used for charitable
purposes.
In all other cases, determine the
amount to enter by multiplying line 1 of
Schedule A by a fraction, the numerator
of which is the amount of net capital gains
that are included in the accounting
income of the estate or trust (that is, not
allocated to corpus) and are distributed to
charities, and the denominator of which is
all items of income (including the amount
of such net capital gains) included in the
DNI.
Reduce the amount on line 5 by any
allocable section 1202 exclusion.
Line 8—Accounting Income
If you are filing for a decedent’s estate or
a simple trust, skip this line. If you are
filing for a complex trust, enter the income
for the tax year determined under the
terms of the governing instrument and
applicable local law. Do not include
extraordinary dividends or taxable stock
dividends determined under the
governing instrument and applicable local
law to be allocable to corpus.
Lines 9 and 10
Do not include any:
• Amounts deducted on prior year’s
return that were required to be distributed
in the prior year;
• Amount that is properly paid or credited
as a gift or bequest of a specific amount
of money or specific property. (To qualify
as a gift or bequest, the amount must be
paid in three or fewer installments.) An
amount that can be paid or credited only
from income is not considered a gift or
bequest; or
• Amount paid or permanently set aside
for charitable purposes or otherwise
qualifying for the charitable deduction.
Line 9—Income Required To Be
Distributed Currently
Line 9 is to be completed by all simple
trusts as well as complex trusts and
decedent’s estates, that are required to
distribute income currently, whether it is
distributed or not. The determination of
whether trust income is required to be
distributed currently depends on the
terms of the governing instrument and the
applicable local law.
The line 9 distributions are referred to
as firsttier distributions and are deductible
by the estate or trust to the extent of the
DNI. The beneficiary includes such
amounts in his or her income to the extent
of his or her proportionate share of the
DNI.
-22-
If a section 643(e)(3) election is made
by the fiduciary, then the amount entered
on line 10 will be the FMV of the property.
A fiduciary of a complex trust or a
decedent’s estate may elect to treat any
amount paid or credited to a beneficiary
within 65 days following the close of the
tax year as being paid or credited on the
last day of that tax year. To make this
election, see the instructions for Question
6 on page 25.
The beneficiary includes the amounts
on line 10 in his or her income only to the
extent of his or her proportionate share of
the DNI.
Complex trusts. If the second tier
distributions exceed the DNI allocable to
the second tier, the trust may have an
accumulation distribution. See the line 11
instructions below.
Line 11—Total Distributions
If line 11 is more than line 8, and you are
filing for a complex trust that has
previously accumulated income, see the
instructions on page 39 to see if you must
complete Schedule J (Form 1041).
Line 12—Adjustment for
Tax-Exempt Income
In figuring the income distribution
deduction, the estate or trust is not
allowed a deduction for any item of the
DNI that is not included in the gross
income of the estate or trust. Thus, for
purposes of figuring the allowable income
distribution deduction, the DNI (line 7) is
figured without regard to any tax-exempt
interest.
If tax-exempt interest is the only
tax-exempt income included in the total
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distributions (line 11), and the DNI (line 7)
is less than or equal to line 11, then enter
on line 12 the amount from line 2.
If tax-exempt interest is the only
tax-exempt income included in the total
distributions (line 11), and the DNI is
more than line 11 (that is, the estate or
trust made a distribution that is less than
the DNI), then figure the adjustment by
multiplying line 2 by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the total
distributions (line 11), and the
denominator of which is the DNI (line 7).
Enter the result on line 12.
If line 11 includes tax-exempt income
other than tax-exempt interest, figure line
12 by subtracting the total of the following
from tax-exempt income included on
line 11:
1. The charitable contribution
deduction allocable to such tax-exempt
income, and
2. Expenses allocable to tax-exempt
income.
Expenses that are directly allocable to
tax-exempt income are allocated only to
tax-exempt income. A reasonable
proportion of expenses indirectly allocable
to both tax-exempt income and other
income must be allocated to each class of
income.
has an amount entered on line 2b(2) of
Form 1041 and any taxable income (line
22), then figure the estate’s or trust’s tax
using the worksheet below and enter the
tax on line 1a.
Note. You must reduce the amount you
enter on line 2b(2) of Form 1041 by the
portion of the section 691(c) deduction
claimed on line 19 of Form 1041 if the
estate or trust received qualified
dividends that were income in respect of
a decedent.
Schedule G—Tax
Computation
Line 1a
2006 tax rate schedule. For tax years
beginning in 2006, figure the tax using the
Tax Rate Schedule below and enter the
tax on line 1a. However, see the
instructions for Schedule D and the
Qualified Dividends Tax Worksheet
below.
Line 2a—Foreign Tax Credit
Attach Form 1116, Foreign Tax Credit
(Individual, Estate, or Trust), if you elect
to claim credit for income or profits taxes
paid or accrued to a foreign country or a
U.S. possession. The estate or trust may
claim credit for that part of the foreign
taxes not allocable to the beneficiaries
(including charitable beneficiaries). Enter
the estate’s or trust’s share of the credit
on line 2a. See Pub. 514, Foreign Tax
Credit for Individuals, for details.
2006 Tax Rate Schedule
If taxable
income
is:
Over —
$0
2,050
4,850
7,400
10,050
But not
over —
$2,050
4,850
7,400
10,050
-----
Its tax is:
15%
$307.50 + 25%
1007.50 + 28%
1,721.50 + 33%
2,596.00 + 35%
Of the
amount
over —
$0
2,050
4,850
7,400
10,050
Line 2b—Other Nonbusiness
Credits
Schedule D and Schedule D Tax
Worksheet. Use Part V of Schedule D or
the Schedule D Tax Worksheet,
whichever is applicable, to figure the
estate’s or trust’s tax if the estate or trust
files Schedule D and has:
• A net capital gain and any taxable
income, or
• Qualified dividends on line 2b(2) of
Form 1041 and any taxable income.
Qualified Dividends Tax Worksheet. If
you do not have to complete Part I or Part
II of Schedule D and the estate or trust
Qualified electric vehicle credit.
Complete and attach Form 8834,
Qualified Electric Vehicle Credit, if the
estate or trust claims a credit for a new
qualified electric vehicle placed in service
in 2006. Include the credit on line 2b.
Alternative motor vehicle credit.
Complete and attach Form 8910,
Alternative Motor Vehicle Credit, if the
estate claims a credit for alternative motor
vehicles. Include the credit for
nondepreciable property on line 2b.
Qualified Dividends Tax Worksheet—Schedule G, line 1a
Caution: Do not use this worksheet if the estate or trust must complete Schedule D.
1. Enter the amount from Form 1041, line 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2. Enter the amount from Form 1041, line 2b(2) . . . . . . . .
2.
3. If you are claiming investment interest expense on Form
4952, enter the amount from line 4g; otherwise enter -03.
4. Subtract line 3 from line 2. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5. Subtract line 4 from line 1. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6. Enter the smaller of the amount on line 1 or $2,050 . . . . . . . . . . . .
7. Is the amount on line 5 equal to or more than the amount on line 6?
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
.......
1.
.......
.......
.......
4.
5.
6.
Yes. Skip lines 7 through 9; go to line 10 and check the ‘‘No’’ box.
No. Enter the amount from line 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.
Subtract line 7 from line 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.
Multiply line 8 by 5% (.05) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Are the amounts on lines 4 and 8 the same?
Yes. Skip lines 10 through 13; go to line 14.
No. Enter the smaller of line 1 or line 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.
Enter the amount from line 8 (if line 8 is blank, enter -0-) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.
Subtract line 11 from line 10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.
Multiply line 12 by 15% (.15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Figure the tax on the amount on line 5. Use the 2006 Tax Rate Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Add lines 9, 13, and 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Figure the tax on the amount on line 1. Use the 2006 Tax Rate Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Tax on all taxable income. Enter the smaller of line 15 or line 16 here and on Sch. G, line 1a
-23-
....
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
9.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
Page 24 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Alternative fuel vehicle refueling
property credit. Complete and attach
Form 8911, Alternative Fuel Vehicle
Refueling Property Credit, if the estate
claims a credit for alternative fuel vehicle
refueling property. Include the credit for
nondepreciable property on line 2b.
Line 2c—General Business
Credit
Do not include any amounts that
are allocated to a beneficiary.
CAUTION Credits that are allocated between
the estate or trust and the beneficiaries
are listed in the instructions for Schedule
K-1, box 13, on page 44. Generally, these
credits are apportioned on the basis of
the income allocable to the estate or trust
and the beneficiaries.
!
Enter on line 2c the estate’s or trust’s
total general business credit.
If the estate or trust is filing Form
8844, Empowerment Zone and Renewal
Community Employment Credit; Form
6478, Credit for Alcohol Used as Fuel; or
Form 8835, Renewable Electricity,
Refined Coal, and Indian Coal Production
Credit; that has a credit from Section B,
check the “Forms” box, enter the form
number in the space provided and include
the allowable credit on line 2c.
The estate or trust must file Form
3800, General Business Credit, to claim
any of the following general business
credits listed on that form. If the estate or
trust claims any of these credits, check
the “Form 3800” box and include the
allowable credit on line 2c. Do not enter
on line 2c any of the source credit form
numbers listed below for any credit
claimed on Form 3800.
• Investment credit (Form 3468).
• Work opportunity credit (Form 5884).
• Welfare-to-work credit (Form 8861).
• Credit for increasing research activities
(Form 6765).
• Low-income housing credit (Form
8586).
• Enhanced oil recovery credit (only from
partnerships and S corporations) (Form
8830).
• Disabled access credit (Form 8826).
• Renewable electricity, refined coal, and
Indian coal production credit (Form 8835,
Section A only).
• Indian employment credit (Form 8845).
• Credit for employer social security and
Medicare taxes paid on certain employee
tips (Form 8846).
• Orphan drug credit (Form 8820).
• New markets credit (Form 8874).
• Credit for small employer pension plan
startup costs (Form 8881).
• Credit for employer-provided child care
facilities and services (Form 8882).
• Qualified railroad track maintenance
credit (Form 8900).
• Biodiesel and renewable diesel fuels
credit (Form 8864).
• Low sulfur diesel fuel production credit
(Form 8896).
• Distilled spirits credit (Form 8906).
• Nonconventional source fuel credit
(Form 8907).
• Energy efficient home credit (Form
8908).
• Energy efficient appliance credit (Form
8909).
• Alternative motor vehicle credit (Form
8910).
• Alternative fuel vehicle refueling
property credit (Form 8911).
• Mine rescue team training credit (Form
8923).
• Credit for contributions to selected
community development corporations
(Form 8847).
• General credits from an electing large
partnership. Report these credits on Form
3800, line 1z.
• Credits for employers affected by
Hurricane Katrina, Rita, or Wilma (Form
5884-A).
Line 2d—Credit for Prior Year
Minimum Tax
An estate or trust that paid alternative
minimum tax in a previous year may be
eligible for a minimum tax credit in 2006.
See Form 8801, Credit for Prior Year
Minimum Tax — Individuals, Estates, and
Trusts.
Line 3—Total Credits
Qualified zone academy bond credit. If
the estate or trust received a qualified
zone academy bond credit as a
shareholder in an S corporation, include
the credit in the line 3 total. To figure the
amount of the allowable credit, the estate
or trust must complete Form 8860,
Qualified Zone Academy Bond Credit. On
the dotted line to the left of the entry, write
“QZAB” and the amount of the credit.
Clean renewable energy bond (CREB)
and Gulf tax credit bond (GTCB)
credits. Complete and attach Form
8912, Credit for Clean Renewable Energy
and Gulf Tax Credit Bonds, if the estate
or trust claims a credit for holding a CREB
or GTCB. Include the credit on line 3. On
the dotted line to the left of the entry, write
“CREB” or “GTCB” and the amount of the
credit. Also, see the instructions for Form
8912 to determine if the estate or trust
must include the amount of the credit in
interest income.
Line 5—Recapture Taxes
Recapture of investment credit. If the
estate or trust disposed of investment
credit property or changed its use before
the end of the recapture period, see Form
4255, Recapture of Investment Credit, to
figure the recapture tax allocable to the
estate or trust.
Recapture of low-income housing
credit. If the estate or trust disposed of
property (or there was a reduction in the
qualified basis of the property) on which
the low-income housing credit was
claimed, see Form 8611, Recapture of
Low-Income Housing Credit, to figure any
recapture tax allocable to the estate or
trust.
-24-
Recapture of qualified electric vehicle
credit. If the estate or trust claimed the
qualified electric vehicle credit in a prior
tax year for a vehicle that ceased to
qualify for the credit, part or all of the
credit may have to be recaptured. See
Pub. 535 for details. If the estate or trust
owes any recapture tax, include it on line
5 and write “QEVCR” on the dotted line to
the left of the entry space.
Recapture of the Indian employment
credit. Generally, if the estate or trust
terminates a qualified employee less than
1 year after the date of initial employment,
any Indian employment credit allowed for
a prior tax year by reason of wages paid
or incurred to that employee must be
recaptured. See Form 8845 for details. If
the estate or trust owes any recapture
tax, include it on line 5 and write “IECR”
on the dotted line to the left of the entry
space.
Recapture of the new markets credit. If
the estate or trust owes any new markets
recapture tax, include it on line 5 and
write “NMCR” on the dotted line to the left
of the entry space. For more information,
including how to figure the recapture
amount, see section 45D(g).
Recapture of the credit for
employer-provided child care facilities.
If the facility ceased to operate as a
qualified child care facility or there was a
change in ownership, part or all of the
credit may have to be recaptured. See
Form 8882 for details. If the estate or trust
owes any recapture tax, include it on line
5 and write “ECCFR” on the dotted line to
the left of the entry space.
Line 6—Household
Employment Taxes
If any of the following apply, get Schedule
H (Form 1040), Household Employment
Taxes, and its instructions, to see if the
estate or trust owes these taxes.
1. The estate or trust paid any one
household employee cash wages of
$1,500 or more in 2006. Cash wages
include wages paid by checks, money
orders, etc. When figuring the amount of
cash wages paid, combine cash wages
paid by the estate or trust with cash
wages paid to the household employee in
the same calendar year by the household
of the decedent or beneficiary for whom
the administrator, executor, or trustee of
the estate or trust is acting.
2. The estate or trust withheld federal
income tax during 2006 at the request of
any household employee.
3. The estate or trust paid total cash
wages of $1,000 or more in any calendar
quarter of 2005 or 2006 to household
employees.
Line 7—Total Tax
Tax on electing small business trusts
(ESBTs). Attach the tax computation to
the return. To the left of the line 7 entry
space, write “Sec. 641(c)” and the amount
of tax on the S corporation items. Include
this amount in the total tax on line 7.
Page 25 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
See Electing Small Business Trusts on
page 7 for the special tax computation
rules that apply to the portion of an ESBT
consisting of stock in one or more S
corporations.
Interest on deferred tax attributable to
installment sales of certain timeshares
and residential lots and certain
nondealer real property installment
obligations. If an obligation arising from
the disposition of real property to which
section 453(l) or 453A applies is
outstanding at the close of the year, the
estate or trust must include the interest
due under section 453(l)(3)(B) or 453A(c),
whichever is applicable, in the amount to
be entered on line 7 of Schedule G, Form
1041, with the notation “Section 453(l)
interest” or “Section 453A(c) interest,”
whichever is applicable. Attach a
schedule showing the computation.
Form 4970, Tax on Accumulation
Distribution of Trusts. Include on this
line any tax due on an accumulation
distribution from a trust. To the left of the
entry space, write “From Form 4970” and
the amount of the tax.
Form 8697, Interest Computation
Under the Look-Back Method for
Completed Long-Term Contracts.
Include the interest due under the
look-back method of section 460(b)(2).
To the left of the entry space, write “From
Form 8697” and the amount of interest
due.
Form 8866, Interest Computation
Under the Look-Back Method for
Property Depreciated Under the
Income Forecast Method. Include the
interest due under the look-back method
of section 167(g)(2). To the left of the
entry space, write “From Form 8866” and
the amount of interest due.
Interest on deferral of gain from
certain constructive ownership
transactions. Include the interest due
under section 1260(b) on any deferral of
gain from certain constructive ownership
transactions. To the left of the entry
space, write “1260(b)” and the amount of
interest due.
Form 5329, Additional Taxes on
Qualified Plans (Including IRAs) and
Other Tax-Favored Accounts. If the
estate or trust fails to receive the
minimum distribution under section 4974,
use Form 5329 to pay the excise tax. To
the left of the entry space, write “From
Form 5329” and the amount of the tax.
Other Information
Question 1
If the estate or trust received tax-exempt
income, figure the allocation of expenses
between tax-exempt and taxable income
on a separate sheet and attach it to the
return. Enter only the deductible amounts
on the return. Do not figure the allocation
on the return itself. For more information,
see the instructions for Allocation of
Deductions for Tax-Exempt Income on
page 16.
Report the amount of tax-exempt
interest income received or accrued in the
space provided below Question 1.
Also, include any exempt-interest
dividends the estate or trust received as a
shareholder in a mutual fund or other
regulated investment company.
Question 2
All salaries, wages, and other
compensation for personal services must
be included on the return of the person
who earned the income, even if the
income was irrevocably assigned to a
trust by a contract assignment or similar
arrangement.
The grantor or person creating the
trust is considered the owner if he or she
keeps “beneficial enjoyment” of or
substantial control over the trust property.
The trust’s income, deductions, and
credits are allocable to the owner.
If you checked “Yes” for Question 2,
see Special Filing Instructions for Grantor
Type Trusts, Pooled Income Funds, and
Electing Small Business Trusts on
page 5.
Question 3
Check the “Yes” box and enter the name
of the foreign country if either 1 or 2
below applies.
1. The estate or trust owns more than
50% of the stock in any corporation that
owns one or more foreign bank accounts.
2. At any time during the year the
estate or trust had an interest in or
signature or other authority over a bank,
securities, or other financial account in a
foreign country.
Exception. Check “No” if either of the
following applies to the estate or trust:
• The combined value of the accounts
was $10,000 or less during the whole
year, or
• The accounts were with a U.S. military
banking facility operated by a U.S.
financial institution.
Get Form TD F 90-22.1, Report of
Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts, to
see if the estate or trust is considered to
have an interest in or signature or other
authority over a bank, securities, or other
financial account in a foreign country. You
can get Form TD F 90-22.1 from the IRS
website at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/
f9022-1.pdf.
If you checked “Yes” for Question 3,
file Form TD F 90-22.1 by June 30, 2007,
with the Department of the Treasury at
the address shown on the form. Form TD
F 90-22.1 is not a tax return, so do not file
it with Form 1041.
If you are required to file Form TD
F 90-22.1 but do not, you may
CAUTION have to pay a penalty of up to
$10,000 (more in some cases).
!
-25-
Question 4
The estate or trust may be required to file
Form 3520, Annual Return To Report
Transactions With Foreign Trusts and
Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, if:
• It directly or indirectly transferred
property or money to a foreign trust. For
this purpose, any U.S. person who
created a foreign trust is considered a
transferor;
• It is treated as the owner of any part of
the assets of a foreign trust under the
grantor trust rules; or
• It received a distribution from a foreign
trust.
An owner of a foreign trust must
TIP ensure that the trust files an
annual information return on Form
3520-A, Annual Information Return of
Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner.
Question 5
An estate or trust claiming an interest
deduction for qualified residence interest
(as defined in section 163(h)(3)) on
seller-provided financing, must include on
an attachment to the 2006 Form 1041 the
name, address, and taxpayer identifying
number of the person to whom the
interest was paid or accrued (that is, the
seller).
If the estate or trust received or
accrued such interest, it must provide
identical information on the person liable
for such interest (that is, the buyer). This
information does not need to be reported
if it duplicates information already
reported on Form 1098.
Question 6
To make the section 663(b) election to
treat any amount paid or credited to a
beneficiary within 65 days following the
close of the tax year as being paid or
credited on the last day of that tax year,
check the box. This election can be made
by the fiduciary of a complex trust or the
executor of a decedent’s estate. For the
election to be valid, you must file Form
1041 by the due date (including
extensions). Once made, the election is
irrevocable.
Question 7
To make the section 643(e)(3) election to
recognize gain on property distributed in
kind, check the box and see the
instructions for Schedule D (Form 1041).
Question 9
Generally, a beneficiary is a skip person if
the beneficiary is in a generation that is
two or more generations below the
generation of the transferor to the trust.
To determine if a beneficiary that is a
trust is a skip person, and for exceptions
to the general rules, see the definition of a
skip person in the instructions for
Schedule R of Form 706.
Page 26 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Schedule I—Alternative
Minimum Tax
General Instructions
Use Schedule I to compute:
1. The estate’s or trust’s alternative
minimum taxable income;
2. The income distribution deduction
on a minimum tax basis; and
3. The estate’s or trust’s alternative
minimum tax (AMT).
Who Must Complete
• Complete Schedule I, Parts I and II, if
the estate or trust is required to complete
Schedule B.
• Complete Schedule I if the estate’s or
trust’s share of alternative minimum
taxable income (Part I, line 29) exceeds
$22,500.
• Complete Schedule I if the estate or
trust claims a credit on line 2b, 2c, or 2d
of Schedule G.
Recordkeeping
Schedule I contains adjustments and tax
preference items that are treated
differently for regular tax and AMT
purposes. If you, as fiduciary for the
estate or trust, completed a form to figure
an item for regular tax purposes, you may
have to complete it a second time for
AMT purposes. Generally, the difference
between the amounts on the two forms is
the AMT adjustment or tax preference
item to enter on Schedule I. Except for
Form 1116, any additional form
completed for AMT purposes does not
have to be filed with Form 1041.
For regular tax purposes, some
deductions and credits may result in
carrybacks or carryforwards to other tax
years. Examples are: investment interest
expense; a net operating loss deduction;
a capital loss; and the foreign tax credit.
Because these items may be refigured for
the AMT, the carryback or carryforward
amount may be different for regular and
AMT purposes. Therefore, you should
keep records of these different
carryforward and carryback amounts for
the AMT and regular tax. The AMT
carryforward will be important in
completing Schedule I for 2007.
Credit for Prior Year Minimum Tax
Estates and trusts that paid alternative
minimum tax in 2005, or had a minimum
tax credit carryforward from the 2005
Form 8801, may be eligible for a
minimum tax credit in 2006. See
Form 8801.
Partners and Shareholders
An estate or trust that is a partner in a
partnership or a shareholder in an S
corporation must take into account its
share of items of income and deductions
that enter into the computation of its
adjustments and tax preference items.
Allocation of Deductions to
Beneficiaries
The distributable net alternative minimum
taxable income (DNAMTI) of the estate or
trust does not include amounts of
depreciation, depletion, and amortization
that are allocated to the beneficiaries, just
as the distributable net income (DNI) of
the estate or trust does not include these
items for regular tax purposes.
Report separately in box 12 of
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) any
adjustments or tax preference items
attributable to depreciation (code G),
depletion (code H), and amortization
(code I) that were allocated to the
beneficiaries.
Optional Write-Off for Certain
Expenditures
There is no AMT adjustment for the
following items if the estate or trust elects
to deduct them ratably over the period of
time shown for the regular tax.
• Circulation expenditures — 3 years
(section 173).
• Research and experimental
expenditures — 10 years (section 174).
• Intangible drilling costs — 60 months
(section 263(c)).
• Mining exploration and development
costs — 10 years (sections 616(a) and
617(a)).
The election must be made in the year
the expenditure was made and may be
revoked only with IRS consent. See
section 59(e) and Regulations section
1.59-1 for more details.
Specific Instructions
Part I—Estate’s or Trust’s Share of
Alternative Minimum Taxable
Income
Line 2—Interest
In determining the alternative minimum
taxable income, qualified residence
interest (other than qualified housing
interest defined in section 56(e)) is not
allowed.
If you completed Form 4952 for regular
tax purposes, you may have an
adjustment on this line. Refigure your
investment interest expense on a
separate AMT Form 4952 as follows.
Step 1. On line 1 of the AMT Form 4952,
follow the instructions for that line, but
also include the following amounts.
• Any qualified residence interest (other
than qualified housing interest) that was
paid or accrued on a loan or part of a loan
that is allocable to property held for
investment as defined in section 163(d)(5)
(for example, interest on a home equity
loan whose proceeds were invested in
stocks or bonds).
• Any interest that would have been
deductible if interest on specified private
activity bonds had been included in
income. See the instructions for line 8 for
the definition of specified private activity
bonds.
-26-
Step 2. On line 2, enter the AMT
disallowed investment interest expense
from 2005.
Step 3. When completing Part II of the
AMT Form 4952, refigure gross income
from property held for investment, any net
gain from the disposition of property held
for investment, net capital gain from the
disposition of property held for
investment, and any investment
expenses, taking into account all AMT
adjustments and tax preference items that
apply. Include any interest income and
investment expenses from private activity
bonds issued after August 7, 1986.
When completing line 4g of the AMT
Form 4952, enter the smaller of:
• The amount from line 4g of the regular
tax Form 4952, or
• The total of lines 4b and 4e of the AMT
Form 4952.
Step 4. Complete Part III.
Enter on Schedule I, line 2, the
difference between line 8 of the AMT
Form 4952 and line 8 of the regular tax
Form 4952. If the AMT deduction is
greater, enter the difference as a negative
amount.
Line 3—Taxes
Enter any state, local, or foreign real
property taxes; state or local personal
property taxes; state, local, or foreign
income taxes; and any state and local
general sales taxes that were included on
line 11 of page 1.
Line 5—Refund of Taxes
Enter any refunds received in 2006 of
taxes described for line 3 above and
included in income.
Line 6—Depletion
Refigure the depletion deduction for AMT
purposes by using only the income and
deductions allowed for the AMT when
refiguring the limit based on taxable
income from the property under section
613(a) and the limit based on taxable
income, with certain adjustments, under
section 613A(d)(1). Also, the depletion
deduction for mines, wells, and other
natural deposits under section 611 is
limited to the property’s adjusted basis at
the end of the year, as refigured for the
AMT, unless the estate or trust is an
independent producer or royalty owner
claiming percentage depletion for oil and
gas wells. Figure this limit separately for
each property. When refiguring the
property’s adjusted basis, take into
account any AMT adjustments made this
year or in previous years that affect basis
(other than the current year’s depletion).
Enter on line 6 the difference between
the regular tax and AMT deduction. If the
AMT deduction is more than the regular
tax deduction, enter the difference as a
negative amount.
Line 7—Net Operating Loss
Deduction
Enter any net operating loss deduction
(NOLD) from line 15a of page 1 as a
positive amount.
Page 27 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
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Line 8—Interest From Specified
Private Activity Bonds Exempt
From the Regular Tax
Enter the interest earned from specified
private activity bonds reduced (but not
below zero) by any deduction that would
have been allowable if the interest were
includible in gross income for regular tax
purposes. Each payer of this type of
interest may send a Form 1099-INT to the
estate or trust showing the amount of this
interest in box 9. Specified private activity
bonds are any qualified bonds (as defined
in section 141) issued after August 7,
1986. See section 57(a)(5) for more
information.
Do not include interest on qualified
Gulf Opportunity Zone bonds described in
section 1400N(a). Exempt-interest
dividends paid by a regulated investment
company are treated as interest from
specified private activity bonds to the
extent the dividends are attributable to
interest received by the company on the
bonds, minus an allocable share of the
expenses paid or incurred by the
company in earning the interest. This
amount may also be reported to the
estate or trust on Form 1099-INT in box 9.
Line 9—Qualified Small Business
Stock
If the estate or trust claimed the exclusion
under section 1202 for gain on qualified
small business stock held more than 5
years, multiply the excluded gain (as
shown on Schedule D (Form 1041)) by
7% (.07). Enter the result on line 9 as a
positive amount.
Line 10—Exercise of Incentive
Stock Options
For regular tax purposes, no income is
recognized when an incentive stock
option (as defined in section 422(b)) is
exercised. However, this rule does not
apply for AMT purposes. Instead, the
estate or trust must generally include on
line 10 the excess, if any, of:
1. The FMV of the stock acquired
through exercise of the option
(determined without regard to any lapse
restriction) when its rights in the acquired
stock first become transferable or when
these rights are no longer subject to a
substantial risk of forfeiture, over
2. The amount paid for the stock,
including any amount paid for the option
used to acquire the stock.
Even if the estate’s or trust’s rights
TIP in the stock are not transferable
and are subject to a substantial
risk of forfeiture, you may elect to include
in AMT income the excess of the stock’s
FMV (determined without regard to any
lapse restriction) over the exercise price
upon the transfer to the estate or trust of
the stock acquired through exercise of the
option. See section 83(b) for more details.
The election must be made no later than
30 days after the date of transfer.
If the estate or trust acquired stock by
exercising an option and it disposed of
that stock in the same year, the tax
treatment under the regular tax and the
AMT is the same, and no adjustment is
required.
Increase the AMT basis of any stock
acquired through the exercise of an
incentive stock option by the amount of
the adjustment.
Line 11—Other Estates and Trusts
If the estate or trust is the beneficiary of
another estate or trust, enter the
adjustment for minimum tax purposes
from box 12, code A, Schedule K-1 (Form
1041).
Line 12—Electing Large
Partnerships
If the estate or trust is a partner in an
electing large partnership, enter on line
12 the amount from Schedule K-1 (Form
1065-B), box 6. Take into account any
amount from Schedule K-1 (Form
1065-B), box 5, when figuring the amount
to enter on line 15.
Line 13—Disposition of Property
Use this line to report any AMT
adjustment related to the disposition of
property resulting from refiguring:
1. Gain or loss from the sale,
exchange, or involuntary conversion of
property reported on Form 4797, Sales of
Business Property;
2. Casualty gain or loss to business or
income-producing property reported on
Form 4684, Casualties and Thefts;
3. Ordinary income from the
disposition of property not taken into
account in 1 or 2 above or on any other
line on Schedule I, such as a disqualifying
disposition of stock acquired in a prior
year by exercising an incentive stock
option; and
4. Capital gain or loss (including any
carryover that is different for the AMT)
reported on Schedule D (Form 1041).
!
CAUTION
The $3,000 capital loss limitation
for the regular tax applies
separately for the AMT.
First, figure any ordinary income
adjustment related to 3 above. Then,
refigure Form 4684, Form 4797, and
Schedule D for the AMT, if applicable, by
taking into account any adjustments you
made this year or in previous years that
affect the estate’s or trust’s basis or
otherwise result in a different amount for
AMT. If the estate or trust has a capital
loss after refiguring Schedule D for the
AMT, apply the $3,000 capital loss
limitation separately to the AMT loss. For
each of the four items listed above, figure
the difference between the amount
included in taxable income for the regular
tax and the amount included in income for
the AMT. Treat the difference as a
negative amount if (a) both the AMT and
regular tax amounts are zero or more and
the AMT amount is less than the regular
tax amount or (b) the AMT amount is a
loss, and the regular tax amount is a
smaller loss, or zero or more.
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Enter on line 13 the combined
adjustments for the four items earlier.
Line 14—Depreciation of Assets
Placed in Service After 1986
This section describes when depreciation
must be refigured for the AMT and how to
figure the amount to enter on line 14.
Do not include on this line any
depreciation adjustment from:
• An activity for which the estate or trust
is not at risk or income or loss from a
partnership or an S corporation if the
basis limitations under section 704(d) or
1366(d) apply. Take this adjustment into
account on line 16;
• A tax shelter farm activity. Take this
adjustment into account on line 23; or
• A passive activity. Take this adjustment
into account on line 15.
What depreciation must be refigured
for the AMT? Generally, you must
refigure depreciation for the AMT,
including depreciation allocable to
inventory costs, for:
• Property placed in service after 1998
that is depreciated for the regular tax
using the 200% declining balance method
(generally 3-, 5-, 7-, or 10-year property
under the modified cost recovery system
(MACRS)),
• Section 1250 property placed in service
after 1998 that is not depreciated for the
regular tax using the straight line method,
and
• Tangible property placed in service
after 1986 and before 1999. If the
transitional election was made under
section 203(a)(1)(B) of the Tax Reform
Act of 1986, this rule applies to property
placed in service after July 31, 1986.
What depreciation is not refigured for
the AMT? Do not refigure depreciation
for the AMT for the following items.
• Residential rental property placed in
service after 1998.
• Nonresidential real property with a
class life of 27.5 years or more placed in
service after 1998 that is depreciated for
the regular tax using the straight line
method.
• Other section 1250 property placed in
service after 1998 that is depreciated for
the regular tax using the straight line
method.
• Property (other than section 1250
property) placed in service after 1998 that
is depreciated for the regular tax using
the 150% declining balance method or
the straight line method.
• Property for which you elected to use
the alternative depreciation system (ADS)
of section 168(g) for the regular tax.
• Qualified property that is or was eligible
for the special depreciation allowance
under section 168(k), 168(l) (in the case
of qualified cellulosic biomass ethanol
plant property), 1400L(b) (in the case of
qualified New York Liberty Zone
property), or 1400N(d) (in the case of
qualified Gulf Opportunity Zone property)
if the depreciable basis of the property for
the AMT is the same as for the regular
tax. The special allowance is deductible
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for the AMT, and there also is no
adjustment required for any depreciation
figured on the remaining basis of the
qualified property if the depreciable basis
of the property for the AMT is the same
as for the regular tax. Property for which
an election is in effect to not have the
special allowance apply is not qualified
property. See section 168(k) for the
definition of qualified property, 168(l) for
the definition of qualified cellulosic
biomass ethanol plan property,
1400L(b)(2) for the definition of qualified
New York Liberty Zone property, and
1400N(d)(2) for the definition of qualified
Gulf Opportunity Zone property.
• Motion picture films, videotapes, or
sound recordings.
• Property depreciated under the
unit-of-production method or any other
method not expressed in a term of years.
• Qualified Indian reservation property.
• Qualified revitalization expenditures for
a building for which you elected to claim
the commercial revitalization deduction
under section 1400I.
• A natural gas gathering line placed in
service after April 11, 2005.
How is depreciation refigured for the
AMT?
Property placed in service before
1999. Refigure depreciation for the AMT
using ADS with the same convention
used for the regular tax. See the table
below for the method and recovery period
to use.
Property Placed in Service Before 1999
IF the property is...
THEN use the...
Section 1250
property.
Straight line method
over 40 years.
Tangible property
(other than section
1250 property)
depreciated using
straight line for the
regular tax.
Straight line method
over the property’s
AMT class life.
Any other tangible
property.
150% declining
balance method,
switching to straight
line the first tax year it
gives a larger
deduction, over the
property’s AMT class
life.
Property placed in service after
1998. Use the same convention and
recovery period used for the regular tax.
For property other than section 1250
property, use the 150% declining balance
method, switching to straight line the first
tax year it gives a larger deduction. For
section 1250 property, use the straight
line method.
How is the AMT class life determined?
The class life used for the AMT is not
necessarily the same as the recovery
period used for the regular tax. The class
lives for the AMT are listed in Rev. Proc.
87-56, 1987-2 C.B. 674, and in Pub. 946,
How To Depreciate Property. Use 12
years for any tangible personal property
not assigned a class life.
See Pub. 946 for optional tables
TIP that can be used to figure AMT
depreciation. Rev. Proc. 89-15,
1989-1 C.B. 816, has special rules for
short tax years and for property disposed
of before the end of the recovery period.
How is the line 14 adjustment figured?
Subtract the AMT deduction for
depreciation from the regular tax
deduction and enter the result. If the AMT
deduction is more than the regular tax
deduction, enter the difference as a
negative amount.
In addition to the AMT adjustment to
your deduction for depreciation, you must
also adjust the amount of depreciation
that was capitalized, if any, to account for
the difference between the rules for the
regular tax and the AMT. Include on this
line the current year adjustment to taxable
income, if any, resulting from the
difference.
Line 15—Passive Activities
Do not enter again elsewhere on
this schedule any AMT adjustment
CAUTION or tax preference item included on
this line.
For AMT purposes, the rules described
in section 469 apply, except that in
applying the limitations, minimum tax
rules apply.
Refigure passive activity gains and
losses on an AMT basis. Refigure a
passive activity gain or loss by taking into
account all AMT adjustments or tax
preference items that pertain to that
activity.
You may complete a second Form
8582 to determine the passive activity
losses allowed for AMT purposes, but do
not send this AMT Form 8582 to the IRS.
Enter the difference between the loss
reported on page 1, and the AMT loss, if
any.
!
The amount of any passive activity
TIP loss that is not deductible (and is
therefore carried forward) for AMT
purposes is likely to differ from the
amount (if any) that is carried forward for
regular tax purposes. Therefore, it is
essential that you retain adequate records
for both AMT and regular tax purposes.
Publicly traded partnerships (PTPs). If
the estate or trust had a loss from a PTP,
refigure the loss using any AMT
adjustments, tax preference items, and
any AMT prior year unallowed loss.
Line 16—Loss Limitations
If the loss is from a passive
activity, use line 15 instead. If the
CAUTION loss is from a tax shelter farm
activity (that is not passive), use line 23.
Refigure your allowable losses for
AMT purposes from activities for which
you are not at risk and basis limitations
applicable to interests in partnerships and
stock in S corporations, by taking into
!
-28-
account your AMT adjustments and tax
preference items. See sections 59(h),
465, 704(d), and 1366(d).
Enter the difference between the loss
reported for regular tax purposes and the
AMT loss. If the AMT loss is more than
the loss reported for regular tax purposes,
enter the adjustment as a negative
amount.
Line 17—Circulation Costs
Do not make this adjustment for
expenditures for which you
CAUTION elected the optional 3-year
write-off period for regular tax purposes.
Circulation expenditures deducted
under section 173(a) for regular tax
purposes must be amortized for AMT
purposes over 3 years beginning with the
year the expenditures were paid or
incurred.
Enter the difference between the
regular tax and AMT deduction. If the
AMT deduction is greater, enter the
difference as a negative amount.
If the estate or trust had a loss on
property for which circulation
expenditures have not been fully
amortized for the AMT, the AMT
deduction is the smaller of (a) the amount
of the loss allowable for the expenditures
had they remained capitalized or (b) the
remaining expenditures to be amortized
for the AMT.
!
Line 18—Long-Term Contracts
For AMT purposes, the percentage of
completion method of accounting
described in section 460(b) generally
must be used. However, this rule does
not apply to any home construction
contract (as defined in section 460(e)(6)).
Note. Contracts described in section
460(e)(1) are subject to the simplified
method of cost allocation of section
460(b)(4).
Enter the difference between the AMT
and regular tax income. If the AMT
income is smaller, enter the difference as
a negative amount.
Line 19—Mining Costs
Do not make this adjustment for
costs for which you elected the
CAUTION optional 10-year write-off period
under section 59(e) for regular tax
purposes.
Expenditures for the development or
exploration of a mine or certain other
mineral deposits (other than an oil, gas,
or geothermal well) deducted under
sections 616(a) and 617(a) for regular tax
purposes must be amortized for AMT
purposes over 10 years beginning with
the year the expenditures were paid or
incurred.
Enter the difference between the
amount allowed for AMT purposes and
the amount allowed for regular tax
purposes. If the amount allowed for AMT
purposes exceeds the amount deducted
!
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for regular tax purposes, enter the
difference as a negative amount.
If the estate or trust had a loss on
property for which mining expenditures
have not been fully amortized for the
AMT, the AMT deduction is the smaller of
(a) the amount of the loss allowable for
the expenditures had they remained
capitalized or (b) the remaining
expenditures to be amortized for the
AMT.
Line 20—Research and
Experimental Costs
Do not make this adjustment for
costs paid or incurred in
CAUTION connection with an activity in
which the estate or trust materially
participated under the passive activity
rules or for costs for which you elected
the optional 10-year write-off for research
and experimental expenditures under
section 59(e) for regular tax purposes.
!
Research and experimental
expenditures deducted under section
174(a) for regular tax purposes generally
must be amortized for AMT purposes
over 10 years beginning with the year the
expenditures were paid or incurred.
Enter the difference between the
amount allowed for AMT purposes and
the amount allowed for regular tax
purposes. If the amount for AMT
purposes exceeds the amount allowed for
regular tax purposes, enter the difference
as a negative amount.
If the estate or trust had a loss on
property for which research and
experimental costs have not been fully
amortized for the AMT, the AMT
deduction is the smaller of (a) the loss
allowable for the costs had they remained
capitalized or (b) the remaining costs to
be amortized for the AMT.
Line 21—Income From Certain
Installment Sales Before January
1, 1987
The installment method does not apply for
AMT purposes to any nondealer
disposition of property that occurred after
August 16, 1986, but before the first day
of your tax year that began in 1987, if an
installment obligation to which the
proportionate disallowance rule applied
arose from the disposition. Enter on line
21 the amount of installment sale income
that was reported for regular tax
purposes.
Line 22—Intangible Drilling Costs
Preference (IDCs)
Do not make this adjustment for
costs for which you elected the
CAUTION optional 60-month write-off under
section 59(e) for regular tax purposes.
!
IDCs from oil, gas, and geothermal
wells are a preference to the extent that
the excess IDCs exceed 65% of the net
income from the wells. Figure the
preference for all oil and gas properties
separately from the preference for all
geothermal properties.
Figure excess IDCs as follows:
1. Determine the amount of the
estate’s or trust’s IDCs allowed for the
regular tax under section 263(c), but do
not include any section 263(c) deduction
for nonproductive wells, then
2. Subtract the amount that would
have been allowed had you amortized
these IDCs over a 120-month period
starting with the month the well was
placed in production.
!
CAUTION
Cost depletion can be substituted
for the amount allowed using
amortization over 120 months.
Net income. Determine net income by
reducing the gross income that the estate
or trust received or accrued during the tax
year from all oil, gas, and geothermal
wells by the deductions allocable to those
wells (reduced by the excess IDCs).
When refiguring net income, use only
income and deductions allowed for the
AMT.
Exception. The preference for IDCs from
oil and gas wells does not apply to
taxpayers who are independent
producers (that is, not integrated oil
companies as defined in section
291(b)(4)). However, this benefit may be
limited. First, figure the IDC preference as
if this exception did not apply. Then, for
purposes of this exception, complete
Schedule I through line 23, including the
IDC preference and combine lines 1
through 23. If the amount of the IDC
preference exceeds 40% of the total of
lines 1 through 23, enter the excess on
line 22 (the benefit of this exception is
limited). Otherwise, do not enter an
amount on line 22 (the estate’s or trust’s
benefit from this exception is not limited).
Line 23—Other Adjustments
Enter on line 23 the total of any other
adjustments that apply including the
following.
• Depreciation figured using pre-1987
rules. For AMT purposes, use the straight
line method to figure depreciation on real
property. Use a recovery period of 19
years for 19-year real property and 15
years for low-income housing. Enter the
excess of depreciation claimed for regular
tax purposes over depreciation refigured
using the straight line method. Figure this
amount separately for each property and
include on line 23 only positive amounts.
For leased personal property other
than recovery property, enter the amount
by which the regular tax depreciation
using the pre-1987 rules exceeds the
depreciation allowable using the straight
line method. For leased 10-year recovery
property and leased 15-year public utility
property, enter the amount by which the
depreciation deduction determined for
regular tax purposes is more than the
deduction allowable using the straight line
method with a half-year convention, no
salvage value, and a recovery period of
15 years (22 years for 15-year public
-29-
utility property). Figure this amount
separately for each property and include
on line 23 only positive amounts.
• Patron’s adjustment. Distributions the
estate or trust received from a
cooperative may be includible in income.
Unless the distributions are nontaxable,
include on line 23 the total AMT
patronage dividend adjustment reported
to the estate or trust from the cooperative.
• Amortization of pollution control
facilities. The amortization deduction
under section 169 must be refigured for
the AMT. For facilities placed in service
after 1986 and before 1999, figure the
amortization deduction for the AMT using
the ADS described in section 168(g). For
facilities placed in service after 1998,
figure the AMT deduction under MACRS
using the straight line method. Enter the
difference between the regular tax and
AMT deduction. If the AMT amount is
greater, enter the difference as a negative
amount.
• Tax shelter farm activities. Figure this
adjustment only if the tax shelter farm
activity (as defined in section 58(a)(2)) is
not a passive activity. If the activity is
passive, include it with any other passive
activities on line 15.
Refigure all gains and losses reported
for the regular tax from tax shelter farm
activities by taking into account any AMT
adjustments and preferences. Determine
tax shelter farm activity gain or loss for
the AMT using the same rules used for
the regular tax with the following
modifications. No refigured loss is
allowed, except to the extent an estate or
trust is insolvent (see section 58(c)(1)). A
refigured loss may not be used in the
current tax year to offset gains from other
tax shelter farm activities. Instead, any
refigured loss must be suspended and
carried forward indefinitely until (a) the
estate or trust has a gain in a subsequent
tax year from the same activity or (b) the
activity is disposed of.
The AMT amount of any tax shelter
farm activity loss that is not deductible
and is carried forward is likely to differ
from the regular tax amount. Keep
adequate records for both the AMT and
regular tax.
Enter the difference between the
amount that would be reported for the
activity on Schedule E or F for the AMT
and the regular tax amount. If (a) the AMT
loss is more than the regular tax loss, (b)
the AMT gain is less than the regular tax
gain, or (c) there is an AMT loss and a
regular tax gain, then enter the
adjustment as a negative amount.
Enter any adjustment for amounts
reported on Schedule D, Form 4684, or
Form 4797 for the activity on line 13
instead.
• Alcohol fuel credit or biodiesel and
renewable diesel fuels credit. If the
adjusted total income (line 17, of page 1)
includes the amount of the alcohol fuel
credit or the biodiesel and renewable
diesel fuels credit under section 87,
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include that amount as a negative amount
on line 23.
• Related adjustments. AMT
adjustments and tax preference items
may affect deductions that are based on
an income limit other than AGI or
modified AGI (for example, farm
conservation expenses). Refigure these
deductions using the income limit as
modified for the AMT. Include the
difference between the regular tax and
AMT deduction on line 23. If the AMT
deduction is more than the regular tax
deduction, include the difference as a
negative amount.
Do not make an adjustment on
line 23 for an item you refigured
CAUTION on another line of Schedule I (for
example, line 6).
!
Line 24—Alternative Tax Net
Operating Loss Deduction
(ATNOLD)
The ATNOLD is the sum of the alternative
tax net operating loss (ATNOL)
carryovers and carrybacks to the tax year,
subject to the limitation explained below.
The net operating loss (NOL) under
section 172(c) is modified for alternative
tax purposes by (a) taking into account
the adjustments made under sections 56
and 58; and (b) reducing the NOL by any
item of tax preference under section 57.
For an estate or trust that held a residual
interest in a real estate mortgage
investment conduit (REMIC), figure the
ATNOLD without regard to any excess
inclusion.
If this estate or trust is the beneficiary
of another estate or trust that terminated
in 2006, include any ATNOL carryover
that was reported in box 11, code E of
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041).
The estate’s or trust’s ATNOLD may
be limited. To figure the ATNOLD
limitation, first figure AMTI without regard
to the ATNOLD and any domestic
production activities deduction. For this
purpose, figure a tentative amount for line
6 of Schedule I by treating line 24 as if it
were zero. Then, figure a tentative total
by combining lines 1 – 23 of Schedule I
using the line 6 tentative amount. Add any
domestic production activities deduction
to this tentative total. The ATNOLD
limitation is 90% of the result.
However, if an ATNOL that is carried
back or carried forward to the tax year is
attributable to qualified Gulf Opportunity
Zone losses as defined in section
1400N(k)(2), the ATNOLD for the tax year
is limited to the sum of:
1. The smaller of:
a. The sum of the ATNOL carrybacks
and carryforwards to the tax year
attributable to net operating losses other
than qualified Gulf Opportunity Zone
losses, or
b. Ninety percent of AMTI for the tax
year (figured without regard to the
ATNOLD and any domestic production
activities deduction, as discussed earlier),
plus
2. The smaller of:
a. The sum of the ATNOL carrybacks
and carryforwards to the tax year
attributable to qualified Gulf Opportunity
Zone losses, or
b. AMTI for the tax year (figured
without regard to the ATNOLD and any
domestic production activities deduction,
as discussed earlier) reduced by the
amount determined under (1), above.
Enter on line 27 the smaller of the
ATNOLD or the ATNOLD limitation.
Any ATNOL not used may be carried
back 2 years or forward up to 20 years
(15 years for loss years beginning before
1998). In some cases, the carryback
period is longer than 2 years; see section
172(b) and 1400N(k) for details.
The treatment of ATNOLs does not
affect your regular tax NOL.
If you elected under section
TIP 172(b)(3) to forego the carryback
reasonable proportion of section 212
expenses that are indirectly allocable to
both tax-exempt interest and other
income must be allocated to each class of
income.
Line 33
Reduce the amount on line 33 by any
allocable section 1202 exclusion (as
refigured for AMT purposes).
Line 34
Enter any capital gains that were paid or
permanently set aside for charitable
purposes from the current year’s income
included on line 1 of Schedule A. Reduce
the amount on line 34 by any allocable
section 1202 exclusion (as refigured for
AMT purposes).
Lines 35 and 36
Capital gains and losses must take into
account any basis adjustments from line
13, Part I.
period for regular tax purposes,
the election will also apply for the AMT.
Line 41—Adjustment for
Tax-Exempt Income
Line 29—Estate’s or Trust’s Share
of Alternative Minimum Taxable
Income
In figuring the income distribution
deduction on a minimum tax basis, the
estate or trust is not allowed a deduction
for any item of DNAMTI (line 37) that is
not included in the gross income of the
estate or trust figured on an AMT basis.
Thus, for purposes of figuring the
allowable income distribution deduction
on a minimum tax basis, the DNAMTI is
figured without regard to any tax-exempt
interest (except for amounts from line 8).
If tax-exempt interest is the only
tax-exempt income included in the total
distributions (line 40), and the DNAMTI
(line 37) is less than or equal to line 40,
then enter on line 41 the amount from
line 31.
If tax-exempt interest is the only
tax-exempt income included in the total
distributions (line 40), and the DNAMTI is
more than line 40 (that is, the estate or
trust made a distribution that is less than
the DNAMTI), then figure the adjustment
by multiplying line 31 by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the total
distributions (line 40), and the
denominator of which is the DNAMTI (line
37). Enter the result on line 41.
If line 40 includes tax-exempt income
other than tax-exempt interest (except for
amounts from line 8), figure line 41 by
subtracting the total expenses allocable to
tax-exempt income that are allowable for
AMT purposes from tax-exempt income
included on line 40.
Expenses that are directly allocable to
tax-exempt income are allocated only to
tax-exempt income. A reasonable
proportion of expenses indirectly allocable
to both tax-exempt income and other
income must be allocated to each class of
income.
For an estate or trust that held a residual
interest in a REMIC, line 29 may not be
less than the estate’s or trust’s share of
the amount on Schedule E (Form 1040),
line 38, column (c). If that amount is
larger than the amount you would
otherwise enter on line 29, enter that
amount instead and write “Sch. Q” on the
dotted line next to line 29.
Part II—Income Distribution
Deduction on a Minimum Tax
Basis
Line 30—Adjusted Alternative
Minimum Taxable Income
Generally, enter on line 30, Schedule I,
the amount from line 25, Schedule I.
However, if both line 4 on page 1 and line
25, Schedule I, are losses, enter on line
30, Schedule I, the smaller of those
losses. If line 4 is zero or a gain and line
25 is a loss, enter zero on line 30,
Schedule I.
Line 31—Adjusted Tax-Exempt
Interest
To figure the adjusted tax-exempt interest
(including exempt-interest dividends
received as a shareholder in a mutual
fund or other regulated investment
company), subtract the total of any:
1. Tax-exempt interest from line 2 of
Schedule A of Form 1041 figured for AMT
purposes, and
2. Section 212 expenses allowable for
AMT purposes allocable to tax-exempt
interest, from the amount of tax-exempt
interest received.
Do not subtract any deductions
reported on lines 2 through 4.
Section 212 expenses that are directly
allocable to tax-exempt interest are
allocated only to tax-exempt interest. A
-30-
Line 44—Income Distribution
Deduction on a Minimum Tax
Basis
Allocate the income distribution deduction
figured on a minimum tax basis among
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the beneficiaries in the same manner as
income was allocated for regular tax
purposes. You need the allocated income
distribution deduction figured on a
minimum tax basis to figure the
beneficiary’s adjustment for minimum tax
purposes, as explained under the
instructions for box 12, code A on
page 43.
Part III—Alternative Minimum
Tax Computation
Line 53—Alternative Minimum
Foreign Tax Credit
To see if you need to figure the
TIP estate’s or trust’s AMT foreign tax
credit, fill in line 55 of Schedule I
as instructed. If the amount on line 55 is
greater than or equal to the amount on
line 52, the estate or trust does not owe
the AMT. Enter zero on line 56 and see
Who Must Complete on page 26 to find
out if you must file Schedule I with Form
1041. However, even if the estate or trust
does not owe AMT, you may need to
complete line 53 to see if you have an
AMT foreign tax credit carryback or
carryforward to other tax years.
To figure the AMT foreign tax credit,
follow the steps discussed below.
Step 1. Complete and attach a separate
AMT Form 1116, with the notation at the
top, “Alt Min Tax” for each separate
limitation category specified at the top of
Form 1116.
Note. When applying the separate
limitation categories, use the applicable
AMT rate instead of the regular tax rate to
determine if any income is “high-taxed.”
Step 2. If you (on behalf of the estate or
trust) previously made or are making the
Simplified limitation election (see page
32), skip Part I and enter on the AMT
Form 1116, line 16, the same amount you
entered on that line for the regular tax. If
you did not complete Form 1116 for the
regular tax and you previously made or
are making the simplified limitation
election (on behalf of the estate or trust),
complete Part I and lines 14 through 16 of
the AMT Form 1116 using regular tax
amounts.
If the election does not apply,
complete Part I, using only income and
deductions allowed for the AMT that are
attributable to sources outside the United
States. If the estate or trust has any
foreign source qualified dividends or
foreign source capital gains or losses, use
the instructions under Step 3 to determine
whether you must make adjustments to
those amounts before you include the
amounts on line 1 or line 5 of the AMT
Form 1116.
Step 3. Follow the instructions later, if
applicable, to determine the amount of
foreign source qualified dividends and
foreign source capital gains and losses to
include on line 1 and line 5 of the AMT
Form 1116.
Foreign qualified dividends. You
must adjust the estate’s or trust’s foreign
source qualified dividends before you
include those amounts on line 1 of the
AMT Form 1116 if:
• Schedule I, line 62 is greater than zero,
• Schedule I, line 74 is smaller than
Schedule I, line 75, and
• The Exception for foreign qualified
dividends below does not apply.
To adjust foreign source qualified
dividends, multiply the estate’s or trust’s
foreign source qualified dividends in each
separate category by 0.5357. Include the
results on line 1 of the AMT Form 1116.
Note. Use the estate’s or trust’s capital
gains and losses as refigured for the AMT
to determine whether your total amounts
are less than the $20,000 threshold under
the adjustment exception.
Do not adjust the amount of any
foreign source qualified dividends
CAUTION you elected to include on line 4g
of the AMT Form 4952.
Exception for foreign qualified
dividends. You do not need to make any
adjustments if both of the following apply.
• The estate or trust qualifies for the
Adjustment exception discussed under
Qualified Dividends Tax Worksheet
(Estates and Trusts) or the Adjustments
to foreign qualified dividends discussed
under Schedule D Filers (both
discussions are in the Instructions for
Form 1116) when you completed a Form
1116 for the regular tax (or you would
have qualified for that adjustment
exception if you had completed a Form
1116 for the regular tax), and
• Schedule I, line 62 is $175,000 or less.
Foreign capital gains or losses. If
any capital gain or loss from U.S. or
foreign sources is different for the AMT,
use the refigured amounts to complete
this step.
To figure the adjustment for the
estate’s or trust’s foreign source capital
gains or losses, you must first determine
whether you can use Worksheet A or
Worksheet B in the Instructions for Form
1116. Otherwise, you must use the
instructions for Capital Gains and Losses
in Pub. 514 to figure the adjustments you
must make to the estate’s or trust’s
foreign source capital gains and losses.
!
Use Worksheet A if the estate or trust
has foreign source capital gains or losses
in no more than two separate categories,
and any of the following apply.
• Schedule D line 14a, column (2) or line
15, column (2), as refigured for the AMT if
necessary, is zero or a loss.
• Schedule D line 18, as refigured for the
AMT if necessary, minus the amount on
Form 4952 line 4e that you elected to
include on Form 4952 line 4g is zero.
• The amount on line 9 of the Schedule
D Tax Worksheet, as refigured for the
AMT if necessary, minus the amount on
Form 4952, line 4e that you elected to
include on Form 4952, line 4g, is zero or
less.
-31-
• You were not required to make
adjustments to the estate’s or trust’s
foreign source qualified dividends under
the rules described earlier (or if the estate
or trust had foreign source qualified
dividends, you would not have been
required to make those adjustments).
Use Worksheet B if you:
• Cannot use Worksheet A,
• Have foreign source capital gains and
losses in no more than 2 separate
categories, and
• Did not have any item of unrecaptured
section 1250 gain or any item of 28% rate
gain or loss for either regular tax or AMT.
Instructions for Worksheets A and
B. When you complete Worksheet A or
B, use foreign source capital gains and
losses as refigured for the AMT, if
necessary, and do not use any foreign
source capital gains that you elected to
include on line 4g of the AMT Form 4952.
Use 0.5357 instead of 0.4286 to complete
lines 11, 13, and 15 of Worksheet B and
to complete Steps 4 and 5 of the Line 15
Worksheet for Worksheet B.
Step 4. Complete Part II and lines 9
through 13 of the AMT Form 1116. Use
the estate’s or trust’s AMT foreign tax
credit carryover, if any, on line 10.
Step 5. If the simplified limitation election
does not apply, complete lines 14 through
16 of the AMT Form 1116.
Step 6. If you did not complete Part IV of
Schedule I, enter the amount from
Schedule I, line 29 on line 17 of the AMT
Form 1116 and go to Step 7 later.
Complete an AMT Worksheet for Line
17 in the Instructions for Form 1116 to
figure the amount to enter on Form 1116,
line 17 if:
• Schedule I, line 62 is greater than zero,
• Schedule I, line 74 is smaller than
Schedule I, line 75, and
• The Exception for the line 17 worksheet
below does not apply.
If you do not have to complete an AMT
Worksheet for Line 17, enter the amount
from Schedule I, line 29 on line 17 of the
AMT Form 1116.
Exception for the line 17 worksheet.
You do not have to complete an AMT
Worksheet for Line 17 in the Instructions
for Form 1116 if:
• The estate or trust qualifies for the
Adjustment exception discussed under
Qualified Dividends Tax Worksheet
(Estates and Trusts) or the Adjustments
to foreign qualified dividends discussed
under Schedule D Filers (both
discussions are in the Instructions for
Form 1116) when you completed a Form
1116 for the regular tax (or you would
have qualified for that adjustment
exception if you had completed a Form
1116 for the regular tax), and
• Schedule I, line 62 is $175,000 or less.
Note. Use the estate’s or trust’s capital
gains and losses as refigured for the AMT
to determine whether your total amounts
are less than the $20,000 threshold under
the adjustment exception.
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Instructions for completing an AMT
Worksheet for Line 17. To complete an
AMT Worksheet for Line 17 in the
Instructions for Form 1116, follow these
instructions.
1. Enter the amount from Schedule I,
line 29 on line 1 of the worksheet.
2. Skip lines 2 and 3 of the worksheet.
3. Enter the amount from Schedule I,
line 72 on line 4 of the worksheet.
4. Multiply line 4 of the worksheet by
0.1071 (instead of 0.2857) and enter the
results on line 5 of the worksheet.
5. Enter the amount from Schedule I,
line 70 on line 6 of the worksheet.
6. Multiply line 6 of the worksheet by
0.4643 (instead of 0.5714 and enter the
result on line 7 of the worksheet.
7. Complete lines 8 and 9 of the
worksheet as instructed on the
worksheet.
Step 7. Enter the amount from Schedule
I, line 52, on the AMT Form 1116, line 19.
Complete lines 18, 20, and 21 of the AMT
Form 1116.
Step 8. Complete Part IV of the first AMT
Form 1116 only.
Enter on line 53 of Schedule I of Form
1041 the amount from line 33 of the first
AMT Form 1116.
Attach to the estate’s or trust’s return,
all AMT Forms 1116 you used to figure
your AMTFTC.
AMT foreign tax credit carryback and
carryforward. If the AMT foreign tax
credit is limited, any unused amount can
be carried back or forward in accordance
with sections 59(a)(2)(B) and 904(c). The
election to forego the carryback period for
regular tax purposes also applies for the
AMT.
Simplified limitation election. The
estate or trust may elect to use a
simplified section 904 limitation to figure
its AMT foreign tax credit. To do so, use
the estate’s or trust’s regular tax income
for Form 1116, Part I, instead of refiguring
the estate’s or trust’s foreign source
income for the AMT, as described in Step
2 on page 31. The estate or trust must
make the election for the first tax year
after 1997 for which it claims an
alternative minimum tax foreign tax credit.
If it does not make the election for that
year, it may not make it for a later year.
Once made, the election applies to all
later tax years and may be revoked only
with IRS consent.
because the AMT basis was different due
to depreciation adjustments or an
incentive stock option adjustment or the
AMT capital loss carryover from 2005 was
different).
2. You did not complete Part V of
Schedule D, the Schedule D Tax
Worksheet, or the Qualified Dividends
Tax Worksheet because Form 1041, line
22, was zero or less.
3. The estate or trust received a
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) that shows an
amount in box 12 with code B, C, D, E, or
F. If this applies, see If the estate or trust
is a beneficiary of another estate or trust.
If 1 or 3 above applies, complete Parts
I through IV of an AMT Schedule D by
refiguring the amounts of your gains and
losses for the AMT. Next, if 1, 2, or 3
above applies, complete the following
lines of the applicable schedule or
worksheet:
• Lines 18 through 22 of an AMT
Schedule D,
• Lines 2 through 13 of an AMT
Schedule D Tax Worksheet, or
• Lines 2 through 4 of a Qualified
Dividends Tax Worksheet.
If you were required to complete an AMT
Form 4952, use it to figure the amount to
enter on line 21 of the AMT Schedule D,
lines 3 and 4 of the AMT Schedule D Tax
Worksheet, and line 3 of the Qualified
Dividends Tax Worksheet. Use amounts
from the AMT Schedule D, AMT Schedule
D Tax Worksheet, or Qualified Dividends
Tax Worksheet to complete Schedule I,
lines 58, 59, and 60. Keep the AMT
Schedule D and worksheet for your
records. Do not attach the AMT Schedule
D to Form 1041.
!
CAUTION
Do not decrease the estate’s or
trust’s section 1202 exclusion by
the amount, if any, included on
line 9.
If the estate or trust is a beneficiary of
another estate or trust. If the estate or
trust received a Schedule K-1 (Form
1041) from another estate or trust that
shows an amount in box 12 with code B,
C, D, E, or F, follow the instructions in the
table below.
IF the code in box
12 is...
B
line 2 of an AMT
Qualified Dividends
Tax Worksheet; line
19 of an AMT
Schedule D (Form
1041); or line 2 of an
AMT Schedule D Tax
Worksheet,
whichever applies.
C
line 3, column (f), of
an AMT Schedule D.
D
line 8, column (f), of
an AMT Schedule D.
Part IV—Line 52 Computation
Using Maximum Capital Gains
Rates
Lines 58, 59, and 60
If you used Schedule D, the Schedule D
Tax Worksheet, or the Qualified Dividend
Tax Worksheet, you generally may enter
the amounts as instructed on Schedule I,
lines 58, 59, and 60. But do not use those
amounts if either of the following applies.
1. Any gain or loss on Schedule D is
different for the AMT (for example,
THEN include that
amount in the total
on...
-32-
E
line 11 of an AMT
Unrecaptured Section
1250 Gain
Worksheet.
F
line 4 of an AMT 28%
Rate Gain
Worksheet.
Schedule D (Form 1041)—
Capital Gains and Losses
What’s New
• If the estate or trust sold or exchanged
a qualified community asset held for more
than 5 years, it may be able to exclude
any qualified capital gain. See Pub. 954.
• The trust can elect to treat musical
compositions and copyrights in musical
works as capital assets if it sold or
exchanged them in a tax year beginning
after May 17, 2006, and acquired the
assets under circumstances entitling it to
the basis of the person who created the
property or for whom it was prepared or
produced.
General Instructions
Purpose of Form
Use Schedule D (Form 1041) to report
gains and losses from the sale or
exchange of capital assets by an estate
or trust.
To report the sale or exchange of
property used in a trade or business,
involuntary conversions (other than
casualties and thefts), and certain
ordinary gains and losses, see Form 4797
and related instructions.
If property is involuntarily converted
because of a casualty or theft, use Form
4684.
Section 1256 contracts and straddles
are reported on Form 6781, Gains and
Losses From Section 1256 Contracts and
Straddles.
Capital Asset
Each item of property held by the estate
or trust (whether or not connected with its
trade or business) is a capital asset
except the following.
• Inventoriable assets or property held
primarily for sale to customers.
• Depreciable or real property used in a
trade or business, even if it is fully
depreciated.
• Copyrights, literary, musical or artistic
compositions, letters or memoranda, or
similar property (a) prepared or produced
for the estate or trust (in the case of
letters, memoranda, or similar property);
or (b) that the trust received from
someone who created them or for whom
they were created in a way (such as by
gift) that entitled the trust to the basis of
the previous owner. However, the trust
can elect to treat musical compositions
and copyrights in musical works as capital
assets if it sold or exchanged them in a
tax year beginning after May 17, 2006,
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and acquired the assets under
circumstances entitling it to the basis of
the person who created the property or
for whom it was prepared or produced.
• Accounts or notes receivable acquired
in the ordinary course of a trade or
business for services rendered or from
the sale of inventoriable assets or
property held primarily for sale to
customers.
• Certain U.S. Government publications
not purchased at the public sale price.
• Certain “commodities derivative
financial instruments” held by a dealer
(see section 1221(a)(6)).
• Certain hedging transactions entered
into in the normal course of a trade or
business (see section 1221(a)(7)).
• Supplies regularly used in a trade or
business.
You may find additional helpful
information in the following publications.
• Pub. 544, Sales and Other Dispositions
of Assets.
• Pub. 551, Basis of Assets.
Short-Term or Long-Term
Separate the capital gains and losses
according to how long the estate or trust
held or owned the property. The holding
period for short-term capital gains and
losses is 1 year or less. The holding
period for long-term capital gains and
losses is more than 1 year. Property
acquired from a decedent is considered
as held for more than 1 year.
When you figure the length of the
period the estate or trust held property,
begin counting on the day after the estate
or trust acquired the property and include
the day the estate or trust disposed of it.
Use the trade dates for the date of
acquisition and sale of stocks and bonds
traded on an exchange or over-thecounter market.
Section 643(e)(3) Election
For noncash property distributions, a
fiduciary may elect to have the estate or
trust recognize gain or loss in the same
manner as if the distributed property had
been sold to the beneficiary at its FMV.
The distribution deduction is the
property’s FMV. This election applies to
all distributions made by the estate or
trust during the tax year and, once made,
may be revoked only with IRS consent.
Note that section 267 does not allow a
trust or a decedent’s estate to claim a
deduction for any loss on property to
which a section 643(e)(3) election
applies. In addition, when a trust or a
decedent’s estate distributes depreciable
property, section 1239 applies to deny
capital gains treatment for any gain on
property to which a section 643(e)(3)
election applies.
Related Persons
A trust cannot deduct a loss from the sale
or exchange of property directly or
indirectly between any of the following:
• A grantor and a fiduciary of a trust,
• A fiduciary and a fiduciary or
beneficiary of another trust created by the
same grantor,
• A fiduciary and a beneficiary of the
same trust,
• A trust fiduciary and a corporation of
which more than 50% in value of the
outstanding stock is owned directly or
indirectly by or for the trust or by or for the
grantor of the trust, or
• An executor of an estate and a
beneficiary of that estate, except when
the sale or exchange is to satisfy a
pecuniary bequest (that is, a bequest of a
sum of money).
Items for Special Treatment
• Bonds and other debt instruments. See
Pub. 550.
• Wash sales of stock or securities
(including contracts or options to acquire
or sell stock or securities) (section 1091).
• Gain or loss on options to buy or sell.
See Pub. 550.
• Certain real estate subdivided for sale
that may be considered a capital asset
(section 1237).
• Gain on disposition of stock in an
interest charge domestic international
sales corporation (section 995(c)).
• Gain on the sale or exchange of stock
in certain foreign corporations (section
1248).
• Sales of stock received under a
qualified public utility dividend
reinvestment plan. See Pub. 550 for
details.
• Transfer of appreciated property to a
political organization (section 84).
• Amounts received by shareholders in
corporate liquidations. See Pub. 550.
• Cash received in lieu of fractional
shares of stock as a result of a stock split
or stock dividend. See Pub. 550.
• Mutual fund load charges, which may
not be taken into account in determining
gain or loss on certain dispositions of
stock in mutual funds if reinvestment
rights were exercised. See Pub. 564.
• The sale or exchange of S corporation
stock or an interest in a trust held for
more than 1 year, which may result in
collectibles gain (28% rate gain). See the
instructions for line 14c beginning on
page 37.
• Gain or loss on the disposition of
securities futures contracts. See Pub.
550.
• Gains from certain constructive
ownership transactions. Gain in excess of
the gain the estate or trust would have
recognized if the estate or trust had held
a financial asset directly during the term
of a derivative contract must be treated as
ordinary income. See section 1260 for
details.
• The sale of qualified empowerment
zone assets acquired after December 21,
2000, that the estate or trust held for
more than 1 year, if you elect to postpone
gain by purchasing other qualified
empowerment zone assets during the
60-day period that began on the date of
the sale. See Pub. 550 and Pub. 954.
-33-
• If the estate or trust sold or exchanged
a District of Columbia Enterprise Zone
(DC Zone) asset that it held for more than
5 years, it can exclude the amount of
“qualified capital gain” from gross income.
See Pub. 954.
• If the estate or trust sold or exchanged
a qualified community asset held for more
than 5 years, it can exclude the amount of
any qualified capital gain from gross
income. This exclusion applies to an
interest in, or property of, certain
businesses operating in a renewal
community. See Pub. 954.
• If qualified dividends include
extraordinary dividends, any loss on the
sale or exchange of the stock is a
long-term capital loss to the extent of the
extraordinary dividends. An extraordinary
dividend is a dividend that is at least 10%
(5% in the case of preferred stock) of the
basis in the stock.
• The sale of publicly traded securities, if
the estate or trust elects to postpone gain
by purchasing common stock or a
partnership interest in a specialized small
business investment company during the
60-day period that began on the date of
the sale. See Pub. 550.
Constructive Sales Treatment for
Certain Appreciated Positions
Generally, the estate or trust must
recognize gain (but not loss) on the date it
enters into a constructive sale of any
appreciated position in stock, a
partnership interest, or certain debt
instruments as if the position were
disposed of at FMV on that date.
The estate or trust is treated as
making a constructive sale of an
appreciated position when it (or a related
person, in some cases) does one of the
following:
• Enters into a short sale of the same or
substantially identical property (that is, a
“short sale against the box”),
• Enters into an offsetting notional
principal contract relating to the same or
substantially identical property,
• Enters into a futures or forward contract
to deliver the same or substantially
identical property, or
• Acquires the same or substantially
identical property (if the appreciated
position is a short sale, offsetting notional
principal contract, or a futures or forward
contract).
Exception. Generally, constructive
sale treatment does not apply if:
• The estate or trust closed the
transaction before the end of the 30th day
after the end of the year in which it was
entered into,
• The estate or trust held the appreciated
position to which the transaction relates
throughout the 60-day period starting on
the date the transaction was closed, and
• At no time during that 60-day period
was the estate’s or trust’s risk of loss
reduced by holding certain other
positions.
For details and other exceptions to
these rules, see Pub. 550.
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Exclusion of Gain on Qualified
Small Business Stock (Section
1202)
Section 1202 provides for an exclusion of
50% of the gain on the sale or exchange
of qualified small business (QSB) stock.
The section 1202 exclusion applies only
to qualified small business stock held for
more than 5 years. To be qualified small
business stock, the stock must meet all of
the following tests.
• It must be stock in a C corporation (that
is, not S corporation stock).
• It must have been originally issued
after August 10, 1993.
• As of the date the stock was issued,
the corporation was a qualified small
business. A qualified small business is a
domestic C corporation with total gross
assets of $50 million or less (a) at all
times after August 9, 1993, and before
the stock was issued, and (b) immediately
after the stock was issued. Gross assets
include those of any predecessor of the
corporation. All corporations that are
members of the same parent-subsidiary
controlled group are treated as one
corporation.
• The estate or trust acquired the stock
at its original issue (either directly or
through an underwriter), either in
exchange for money or other property or
as pay for services (other than as an
underwriter) to the corporation. In certain
cases, the estate or trust may meet the
test if it acquired the stock from another
person who met this test (such as by gift
or at death) or through a conversion or
exchange of qualified small business
stock the estate or trust held.
• During substantially all the time the
estate or trust held the stock:
1. The corporation was a C
corporation,
2. At least 80% of the value of the
corporation’s assets were used in the
active conduct of one or more qualified
businesses (defined below), and
3. The corporation was not a foreign
corporation, DISC, former DISC,
corporation that has made (or that has a
subsidiary that has made) a section 936
election, regulated investment company,
real estate investment trust, REMIC,
FASIT, or cooperative.
Note. A specialized small business
investment company (SSBIC) is treated
as having met test 2 above.
Qualified business. A qualified business
is any business other than the following:
• One involving services performed in the
fields of health, law, engineering,
architecture, accounting, actuarial
science, performing arts, consulting,
athletics, financial services, or brokerage
services;
• One whose principal asset is the
reputation or skill of one or more
employees;
• Any banking, insurance, financing,
leasing, investing, or similar business;
• Any farming business (including the
raising or harvesting of trees);
• Any business involving the production
of products for which percentage
depletion can be claimed; or
• Any business of operating a hotel,
motel, restaurant, or similar business.
For more details about limits and
additional requirements that may apply,
see section 1202.
Empowerment zone business stock.
Generally, the estate or trust can exclude
up to 60% of its gain on certain qualified
small business stock if it meets the
following additional requirements.
1. The stock sold or exchanged was
stock in a corporation that qualified as an
empowerment zone business during
substantially all of the time the estate or
trust held the stock.
2. The estate or trust acquired the
stock after December 21, 2000.
Requirement 1 will still be met if the
corporation ceased to qualify after the
5-year period that began on the date the
estate or trust acquired the stock.
However, the gain that qualifies for the
60% exclusion cannot be more than the
gain the estate or trust would have had if
it had sold the stock on the date the
corporation ceased to qualify.
For more information about
empowerment zone businesses, see Pub.
954.
Pass-through entities. If the estate or
trust held an interest in a pass-through
entity (a partnership, S corporation,
mutual fund, or other regulated
investment company) that sold qualified
small business stock, the estate or trust
generally must have held the interest on
the date the pass-through entity acquired
the qualified small business stock and at
all times thereafter until the stock was
sold to qualify for the exclusion.
How to report. Report in column (f) of
line 6 the entire gain realized on the sale
of qualified small business stock.
Complete all other columns as indicated.
Directly below the line on which you
reported the gain, enter in column (a)
“Section 1202 exclusion,” and enter as a
(loss) in column (f) the amount of the
allowable exclusion. On line 2 of the 28%
Rate Gain Worksheet, include an amount
equal to the 50% exclusion (2/3 of the
exclusion if you claimed a 60%
exclusion). Also, see the instructions for
Schedule I, line 9, for information on the
amount of the exclusion to include on
Schedule I.
Gain from Form 1099-DIV. If the
estate or trust received a Form 1099-DIV
with a gain in box 2c, part or all of that
gain (which is also included in box 2a)
may be eligible for the section 1202
exclusion. In column (a) of line 6, enter
the name of the corporation whose stock
was sold. In column (f), enter the amount
of the allowable exclusion as a (loss).
Also, include the amount of the 50%
exclusion as a gain on line 2 of the 28%
-34-
Rate Gain Worksheet (include 2/3 of the
exclusion if you claimed a 60%
exclusion).
Gain from Form 2439. If the estate or
trust received a Form 2439, Notice to
Shareholder of Undistributed Long-Term
Capital Gains, with a gain in box 1c, part
or all of that gain (which is also included
in box 1a) may be eligible for the section
1202 exclusion. In column (a) of line 6,
enter the name of the corporation whose
stock was sold. In column (f), enter the
amount of the allowable exclusion as a
(loss). Also, include the amount of the
50% exclusion as a gain on line 2 of the
28% Rate Gain Worksheet (include 2/3 of
the exclusion if you claimed a 60%
exclusion).
Gain from an installment sale of
QSB stock. If all payments are not
received in the year of sale, a sale of
QSB stock that is not traded on an
established securities market generally is
treated as an installment sale and is
reported on Form 6252. Part or all of any
gain from the sale that is reported on
Form 6252 for the current year may be
eligible for the section 1202 exclusion. In
column (a) of line 6, enter the name of the
corporation whose stock was sold. In
column (f), enter the amount of your
allowable exclusion as a loss. Also,
include the amount of the 50% exclusion
as a gain on line 2 of the 28% Rate Gain
Worksheet (include 2/3 of the exclusion if
you claimed a 60% exclusion).
Rollover of gain from qualified small
business stock. If the estate or trust
held qualified small business stock (as
defined above) for more than 6 months, it
may elect to postpone gain if it purchased
other qualified small business stock
during the 60-day period that began on
the date of the sale.
The estate or trust must recognize
gain to the extent the sale proceeds
exceed the cost of the replacement stock.
Reduce the basis of the replacement
stock by any postponed gain.
The estate or trust must make the
election no later than the due date
(including extensions) for filing Form 1041
for the tax year in which the stock was
sold. If the original Form 1041 was filed
on time, the election may be made on an
amended return filed no later than 6
months after the due date of the original
return (excluding extensions). Write “Filed
pursuant to section 301.9100-2” at the top
of the amended return, and file it at the
same address used for the original Form
1041.
To make the election, report the entire
gain realized on the sale on line 1 or 6.
Directly below the line on which you
reported the gain, enter in column (a)
“Section 1045 Rollover” and enter as a
(loss) in column (f) the amount of the
postponed gain.
Page 35 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Specific Instructions
Lines 1 and 6
Short-term and long-term capital gains
and losses. Enter all sales of stocks,
bonds, etc.
Redemption of stock to pay death
taxes. If stock is redeemed under the
provisions of section 303, list and identify
it on line 6 and give the name of the
decedent and the IRS office where the
estate tax or generation-skipping transfer
tax return was filed.
If you are reporting capital gain from a
lump-sum distribution, see the
instructions for Form 4972 for information
about the federal estate tax.
Column (d) —Sales Price
Enter either the gross sales price or the
net sales price from the sale. On sales of
stocks and bonds, report the gross
amount as reported to the estate or trust
on Form 1099-B or similar statement.
However, if the estate or trust was
advised that gross proceeds less
commissions and option premiums were
reported to the IRS, enter that net amount
in column (d).
Column (e) —Cost or Other Basis
Basis of trust property. Generally, the
basis of property acquired by gift is the
same as the basis in the hands of the
donor. If the FMV of the property at the
time it was transferred to the trust is less
than the transferor’s basis, then the FMV
is used for determining any loss on
disposition.
If the property was transferred to the
trust after 1976, and a gift tax was paid
under Chapter 12, then increase the
donor’s basis as follows:
Multiply the amount of the gift tax paid
by a fraction, the numerator of which is
the net appreciation in value of the gift
(defined below), and the denominator of
which is the amount of the gift. For this
purpose, the net appreciation in value of
the gift is the amount by which the FMV of
the gift exceeds the donor’s adjusted
basis.
Basis of decedent’s estate property.
Generally, the basis of property acquired
by a decedent’s estate is the FMV of the
property at the date of the decedent’s
death, or the alternate valuation date if
the executor elected to use an alternate
valuation under section 2032.
See Pub. 551 for a discussion of the
valuation of qualified real property under
section 2032A.
Basis of assets held on January 1,
2001, where an election to recognize
gain was made. If you elected on behalf
of an estate or trust to recognize gain on
an asset held on January 1, 2001, the
basis in the asset is its closing market
price or fair market value, whichever
applies, on the date of the deemed sale
and reacquisition, whether the deemed
sale resulted in a gain or an unallowed
loss.
Adjustments to basis. Before figuring
any gain or loss on the sale, exchange, or
other disposition of property owned by the
estate or trust, adjustments to the
property’s basis may be required.
amount of the credit for tax paid. See
Pub. 550 for more details.
!
CAUTION
Some items that may increase the
basis include:
1. Broker’s fees and commissions,
2. Reinvested dividends that were
previously reported as income,
3. Reinvested capital gains that were
previously reported as income,
4. Costs that were capitalized, and
5. Original issue discount that has
been previously included in income.
Some items that may decrease the
basis include:
1. Nontaxable distributions that
consist of return of capital,
2. Deductions previously allowed or
allowable for depreciation, and
3. Casualty or theft loss deductions.
See Pub. 551 for additional
information.
See section 852(f) for treatment of
load charges incurred in acquiring stock
in a regulated investment company.
Carryover basis. Carryover basis
determined under repealed section 1023
applies to property acquired from a
decedent who died after December 31,
1976, and before November 7, 1978, only
if the executor elected it on a Form
5970-A, Election of Carryover Basis, that
was filed on time.
Column (f) —Gain or (Loss)
Make a separate entry in this column for
each transaction reported on lines 1 and
6 and any other lines that apply to the
estate or trust. For lines 1 and 6, subtract
the amount in column (e) from the amount
in column (d). Enter negative amounts in
parentheses.
Lines 2 and 7
Undistributed capital gains. Include on
line 7, column (f), the amount from box 1a
of Form 2439. This represents the
estate’s or trust’s share of the
undistributed long-term capital gains of
the regulated investment company
(mutual fund) or real estate investment
trust.
If there is an amount in box 1b of Form
2439, include that amount on line 11 of
the Unrecaptured Section 1250 Gain
Worksheet later if you are required to
complete line 14b, column (2) of
Schedule D. If there is an amount in box
1c of Form 2439, see Exclusion of Gain
on Qualified Small Business Stock
(Section 1202) on page 34. If there is an
amount in box 1d of Form 2439, include
that amount on line 4 of the 28% Rate
Gain Worksheet.
Enter on Form 1041, line 24g, the tax
paid as shown in box 2 of Form 2439.
Add to the basis of your stock the excess
of the amount included in income over the
-35-
The instructions above assume
the estate or trust is a cash basis
calendar year taxpayer.
Installment sales. If the estate or trust
sold property (other than publicly traded
stocks or securities) at a gain during the
tax year and will receive a payment in a
later tax year, you generally report the
sale on the installment method and file
Form 6252, Installment Sale Income,
unless you elect not to do so.
Also, use Form 6252 to report any
payment received in 2006 from a sale
made in an earlier tax year that was
reported on the installment method.
To electout of the installment method,
report the full amount of the gain on a
timely filed return (including extensions).
If the original return was filed on time, the
election may be made on an amended
return filed no later than 6 months after
the due date of the original return
(excluding extensions). Write “Filed
pursuant to section 301.9100-2” at the top
of the amended return, and file it at the
same address used for the original
Form 1041.
Exchange of “like-kind” property.
Generally, no gain or loss is recognized
when property held for productive use in a
trade or business or for investment is
exchanged solely for property of a
like-kind to be held either for productive
use in a trade or business or for
investment. However, if a trust exchanges
like-kind property with a related person
(see Related Persons on page 33), and
before 2 years after the date of the last
transfer that was part of the exchange the
related person disposes of the property,
or the trust disposes of the property
received in exchange from the related
person, then the original exchange will
not qualify for nonrecognition. See section
1031(f) for exceptions.
Complete and attach Form 8824,
Like-Kind Exchanges, to Form 1041 for
each exchange.
Line 9—Capital Gain Distributions
Enter as a long-term capital gain on line
9, column (f), the total capital gain
distributions paid during the year,
regardless of how long the estate or trust
held its investment. This amount is shown
in box 2a of Form 1099-DIV. If there is an
amount in box 2b, include that amount on
line 11 of the Unrecaptured Section 1250
Gain Worksheet later if you are required
to complete the worksheet. If there is an
amount in box 2c, see Exclusion of Gain
on Qualified Small Business Stock on
page 34. If there is an amount in box 2d
of Form 1099-DIV, include the amount on
line 4 of the 28% Rate Gain Worksheet.
!
CAUTION
The instructions above assume
the estate or trust is a cash basis
calendar year taxpayer.
Page 36 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Line 13, Column (1) —
Beneficiaries’ Net Short-Term
Capital Gain or Loss
permanently set aside for a charitable
purpose specified in section 642(c).
Enter the amount of net short-term capital
gain or loss allocable to the beneficiary or
beneficiaries. Include only those
short-term capital losses that are taken
into account in determining the amount of
gain from the sale or exchange of capital
assets that is paid, credited, or required to
be distributed to any beneficiary during
the tax year. See Regulations section
1.643(a)-3 for more information about
allocation of capital gains and losses.
Enter the total of the amounts entered in
columns (1) and (2). The amount in
column (3) should be the same as the
amount on line 5.
If the losses from the sale or exchange
of capital assets are more than the gains,
the net loss must be allocated to the
estate or trust and not to the
beneficiaries.
Line 13, Column (2) —Estate’s or
Trust’s Net Short-Term Capital
Gain or Loss
Enter the amount of the net short-term
capital gain or loss allocable to the estate
or trust. Include any capital gain paid or
Line 13, Column (3) —Total
Line 14a —Net Long-Term Capital
Gain or Loss
Allocate the net long-term capital gain or
loss on line 14a in the same manner as
the net short-term capital gain or loss on
line 13. However, do not take the section
1202 exclusion on gain from the sale or
exchange of qualified small business
stock into account when figuring net
long-term capital gain or loss allocable to
the beneficiaries.
Line 14b—Unrecaptured Section
1250 Gain
Complete the worksheet on page 35 if
any of the following apply.
• During the tax year, the estate or trust
sold or otherwise disposed of section
1250 property (generally, real property
Unrecaptured Section 1250 Gain Worksheet—Line 14b
that was depreciated) held more than 1
year.
• The estate or trust received installment
payments during the tax year for section
1250 property held more than 1 year for
which it is reporting gain on the
installment method.
• The estate or trust received a Schedule
K-1 from an estate or trust, partnership, or
S corporation that shows “unrecaptured
section 1250 gain” reportable for the tax
year.
• The estate or trust received a Form
1099-DIV or Form 2439 from a real estate
investment trust or regulated investment
company (including a mutual fund) that
reports “unrecaptured section 1250 gain”
for the tax year.
• The estate or trust reported a long-term
capital gain from the sale or exchange of
an interest in a partnership that owned
section 1250 property.
Instructions for the Unrecaptured
Section 1250 Gain Worksheet
Lines 1 through 3. If the estate or trust
had more than one property described on
Keep for Your Records
If the estate or trust is not reporting a gain on Form 4797, line 7, skip lines 1 through 9 and go to line
10.
1. If the estate or trust has a section 1250 property in Part III of Form 4797 for which you made an entry in
Part I of Form 4797 (but not on Form 6252), enter the smaller of line 22 or line 24 of Form 4797 for that
property. If the estate or trust did not have any such property, go to line 4. If it had more than one such
property, see instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.
2. Enter the amount from Form 4797, line 26g, for the property for which you made an entry on line 1 . . . . 2.
3. Subtract line 2 from line 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.
4. Enter the total unrecaptured section 1250 gain included on line 26 or line 37 of Form(s) 6252 from
installment sales of trade or business property held more than 1 year (see instructions) . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.
5. Enter the total of any amounts reported to the estate or trust on a Schedule K-1 from a partnership or an
S corporation as “unrecaptured section 1250 gain” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.
6. Add lines 3 through 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.
7. Enter the smaller of line 6 or the gain from Form 4797, line 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.
8. Enter the amount, if any, from Form 4797, line 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.
9. Subtract line 8 from line 7. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.
10. Enter the amount of any gain from the sale or exchange of an interest in a partnership attributable to
unrecaptured section 1250 gain (see instructions) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.
11. Enter the total of any amounts reported to the estate or trust on a Schedule K-1, Form 1099-DIV, or
Form 2439 as “unrecaptured section 1250 gain” from an estate, trust, real estate investment trust, or
mutual fund (or other regulated investment company) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.
12. Enter the total of any unrecaptured section 1250 gain from sales (including installment sales) or other
dispositions of section 1250 property held more than 1 year for which you did not make an entry in Part I
of Form 4797 for the year of sale (see instructions) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.
13. Add lines 9 through 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13.
14. If the estate or trust had any section 1202 gain or collectibles gain or (loss), enter
the total of lines 1 through 4 of the 28% Rate Gain Worksheet on page 37.
Otherwise, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14.
15. Enter the (loss), if any, from Schedule D, line 5. If Schedule D, line 5, is zero or a
gain, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15. (
)
16. Enter the estate’s or trust’s long-term capital loss carryovers from Schedule D, line
11, and from Schedule K-1 (Form 1041), box 11, code C, from another estate or
trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16. (
)
17. Combine lines 14 through 16. If the result is a (loss), enter it as a positive amount. If the result is zero or
a gain, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.
18. Unrecaptured section 1250 gain. Subtract line 17 from line 13. If zero or less, enter -0-. Enter the result
here and in the appropriate columns of Schedule D, line 14b . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18.
-36-
Page 37 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
line 1, complete lines 1 through 3 for each
property on a separate worksheet. Enter
the total of the line 3 amounts for all
properties on line 3 and go to line 4.
Line 4. To figure the amount to enter on
line 4, follow the steps below for each
installment sale of trade or business
property held more than 1 year.
Step 1. Figure the smaller of (a) the
depreciation allowed or allowable or (b)
the total gain for the sale. This is the
smaller of line 22 or line 24 of the 2006
Form 4797 (or the comparable lines of
Form 4797 for the year of sale) for that
property.
Step 2. Reduce the amount figured in
step 1 by any section 1250 ordinary
income recapture for the sale. This is the
amount from line 26g of the 2006 Form
4797 (or the comparable line of Form
4797 for the year of sale) for that
property. The result is the total
unrecaptured section 1250 gain that must
be allocated to the installment payments
received from the sale.
Step 3. Generally, the amount of
section 1231 gain on each installment
payment is treated as unrecaptured
section 1250 gain until the total
unrecaptured section 1250 gain figured in
step 2 has been used in full. Figure the
amount of gain treated as unrecaptured
section 1250 gain for installment
payments received during the tax year, as
the smaller of (a) the amount from line 26
or line 37 of the 2006 Form 6252,
whichever applies, or (b) the amount of
unrecaptured section 1250 gain
remaining to be reported. This amount is
generally the total unrecaptured section
1250 gain for the sale reduced by all gain
reported in prior years (excluding section
1250 ordinary income recapture).
However, if you chose not to treat all of
the gain from payments received after
May 6, 1997, and before August 24,
1999, as unrecaptured section 1250 gain,
use only the amount you chose to treat as
unrecaptured section 1250 gain for those
payments to reduce the total
unrecaptured section 1250 gain
remaining to be reported for the sale.
Include this amount on line 4.
Line 10. Include on line 10 the estate’s or
trust’s share of the partnership’s
unrecaptured section 1250 gain that
would result if the partnership had
transferred all of its section 1250 property
in a fully taxable transaction immediately
before the estate or trust sold or
exchanged its interest in that partnership.
If the estate or trust recognized less than
all of the realized gain, the partnership will
be treated as having transferred only a
proportionate amount of each section
1250 property.
Line 12. An example of an amount to
include on line 12 is unrecaptured section
1250 gain from the sale of a vacation
home previously used as a rental property
but converted to personal use prior to the
sale. To figure the amount to enter on line
12, follow the applicable instructions
below.
Installment sales. To figure the
amount to include on line 12, follow the
steps below for each installment sale of
property held more than 1 year for which
you did not make an entry in Part I of
Form 4797 for the year of sale.
Step 1. Figure the smaller of (a) the
depreciation allowed or allowable or (b)
the total gain for the sale. This is the
smaller of line 22 or line 24 of the 2006
Form 4797 (or comparable lines of Form
4797 for the year of sale) for that
property.
Step 2. Reduce the amount figured in
step 1 by any section 1250 ordinary
income recapture for the sale. This is the
amount from line 26g of the 2006 Form
4797 (or the comparable line of Form
4797 for the year of sale) for that
property. The result is the total
unrecaptured section 1250 gain that must
be allocated to the installment payments
received from the sale
Step 3. Generally, the amount of
capital gain on each installment payment
is treated as unrecaptured section 1250
gain until the total unrecaptured section
28% Rate Gain Worksheet—Line 14c
1250 gain figured in step 2 has been used
in full. Figure the amount of gain treated
as unrecaptured section 1250 gain for
installment payments received during the
tax year, as the smaller of (a) the amount
from line 26 or line 37 of the 2006 Form
6252, whichever applies, or (b) the
amount of unrecaptured section 1250
gain remaining to be reported. This
amount is generally the total
unrecaptured section 1250 gain for the
sale reduced by all gain reported in prior
years (excluding section 1250 ordinary
income recapture). However, if you chose
not to treat all of the gain from payments
received after May 6, 1997, and before
August 24, 1999, as unrecaptured section
1250 gain, use only the amount you
chose to treat as unrecaptured section
1250 gain for those payments to reduce
the total unrecaptured section 1250 gain
remaining to be reported for the sale.
Include this amount on line 12
Other sales or dispositions of
section 1250 property. For each sale of
property held more than 1 year (for which
an entry was not made in Part I of Form
4797), figure the smaller of (a) the
depreciation allowed or allowable or (b)
the total gain for the sale. This is the
smaller of line 22 or line 24 of Form 4797
for that property. Next, reduce that
amount by any section 1250 ordinary
income recapture for the sale. This is the
amount from line 26g of Form 4797 for
that property. The result is the total
unrecaptured section 1250 gain for the
sale. Include this amount on line 12.
Line 14c —28% Rate Gain
Complete the 28% Rate Gain Worksheet
if lines 14a and 15 for column (3) are both
greater than zero and at least one of the
following apply:
• The estate or trust reports in Part II,
column (f), a section 1202 exclusion from
the eligible gain on qualified small
business stock (see page 34), or
• The estate or trust reports in Part II,
column (f), a collectibles gain or (loss).
Keep for Your Records
1. Enter the total of all collectibles gain or (loss) from items reported on line 6, column (f), of Schedule D . .
2. Enter as a positive number the amount of any section 1202 exclusion reported on line 6, column (f), of
Schedule D, for which you excluded 50% of the gain, plus 2/3 of any section 1202 exclusion reported on
line 6, column (f), for which you excluded 60% of the gain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3. Enter the total of all collectibles gain or (loss) from Form 4684, line 4 (but only if Form 4684, line 15, is
more than zero); Form 6252; Form 6781, Part II; and Form 8824 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4. Enter the total of any collectibles gain reported to the estate or trust on:
• Form 1099-DIV, box 2d;
.............
• Form 2439, box 1d; and
• Schedule K-1 from a partnership, S corporation, estate, or trust.
5. Enter the estate’s or trust’s long-term capital loss carryovers from Schedule D, line 11, and from box 11,
code C of Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) from another estate or trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6. If Schedule D, line 5, is a (loss), enter that (loss) here. Otherwise, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7. Combine lines 1 through 6. If zero or less, enter -0-. If more than zero, also enter this amount in the
appropriate columns of Schedule D, line 14c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
}
-37-
1.
2.
3.
4.
5. (
)
6. (
)
7.
Page 38 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Schedule D Tax Worksheet Keep for your records
Complete this worksheet only if line 14b, column (2), or line 14c, column (2), of Schedule D is more than zero.
Exception: Do not use this worksheet to figure the estate’s or trust’s tax if line 14a, column (2), or line 15, column (2), of Schedule D or Form
1041, line 22, is zero or less; instead, see the Instructions for Schedule G, line 1a of Form 1041.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
Enter the estate’s or trust’s taxable income from Form 1041, line 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Enter qualified dividends, if any, from Form 1041, line 2b(2) . . . . . . . . . . . 2.
Enter the amount from Form 4952, line 4g . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.
Enter the amount from Form 4952, line 4e* . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.
Subtract line 4 from line 3. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.
Subtract line 5 from line 2. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.
Enter the smaller of line 14a, col. (2) or line 15, col. (2) from Sch. D . . . . . 7.
Enter the smaller of line 3 or line 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.
Subtract line 8 from line 7. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.
Add lines 6 and 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.
Add lines 14b, column (2) and 14c, column (2) from Schedule D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.
Enter the smaller of line 9 or line 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.
Subtract line 12 from line 10. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Subtract line 13 from line 1. If zero or less, enter -0-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Enter the smaller of line 1 or $2,050 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.
Enter the smaller of line 14 or line 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16.
Subtract line 10 from line 1. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.
Enter the larger of line 16 or line 17 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 䊳 18.
If lines 15 and 16 are the same, skip lines 19 and 20 and go to line 21. Otherwise,
go to line 19.
Subtract line 16 from line 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 䊳 19.
Multiply line 19 by 5% (.05) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
If lines 1 and 15 are the same, skip lines 21 through 33 and go to line 34. Otherwise, go to line 21.
Enter the smaller of line 1 or line 13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21.
Enter the amount from line 19 (if line 19 is blank, enter -0-) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22.
Subtract line 22 from line 21. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 䊳 23.
Multiply line 23 by 15% (.15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
If Schedule D, line 14b, column (2) is zero or blank, skip lines 25 through 30 and go to line 31. Otherwise, go to
line 25.
Enter the smaller of line 9 (above) or line 14b, col. (2) (from Schedule D) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.
Add lines 10 and 18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26.
Enter the amount from line 1 above . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27.
Subtract line 27 from line 26. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28.
Subtract line 28 from line 25. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 䊳 29.
Multiply line 29 by 25% (.25) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
If Schedule D, line 14c, column (2) is zero or blank, skip lines 31 through 33 and go to line 34. Otherwise, go to
line 31.
Add lines 18, 19, 23, and 29 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31.
Subtract line 31 from line 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32.
Multiply line 32 by 28% (.28) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Figure the tax on the amount on line 18. Use the 2006 Tax Rate Schedule on page 23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Add lines 20, 24, 30, 33, and 34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Figure the tax on the amount on line 1. Use 2006 Tax Rate Schedule on page 23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Tax on all taxable income (including capital gains and qualified dividends). Enter the smaller of line 35 or line 36
here and on line 1a of Sch. G, Form 1041 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
*If applicable, enter instead the smaller amount entered on the dotted line next to line 4e of Form 4952.
-38-
. . 1.
. . 13.
. . 14.
. . 20.
. . 24.
. . 30.
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33
34.
35.
36.
. . 37.
Page 39 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Capital Loss Carryover Worksheet Keep for Records
Use this worksheet to figure the estate’s or trust’s capital loss carryovers from 2006 to 2007 if Schedule D, line 16,
is a loss and (a) the loss on Schedule D, line 15, col. (3), is more than $3,000 or (b) Form 1041, page 1, line 22, is
a loss.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
Enter taxable income or (loss) from Form 1041, line 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.
Enter the loss from line 16 of Schedule D as a positive amount . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.
Enter amount from Form 1041, line 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.
Adjusted taxable income. Combine lines 1, 2, and 3. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4.
Enter the smaller of line 2 or line 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5.
Note: If line 5 of Schedule D is a loss, go to line 6; otherwise, enter -0- on line 6 and go to line 10.
Enter loss from Schedule D, line 5, as a positive amount . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6.
Enter gain, if any, from Schedule D, line 12. If that line is blank or shows a loss,
enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.
Add lines 5 and 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.
Short-term capital loss carryover to 2007. Subtract line 8 from line 6. If zero or less, enter -0-. If this is
the final return of the estate or trust, also enter on Schedule K-1 (Form 1041), box 11, using code B . . .
9.
Note: If line 12 of Schedule D is a loss, go to line 10; otherwise, skip lines 10 through 14.
Enter loss from Schedule D, line 12, as a positive amount . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.
Enter gain, if any, from Schedule D, line 5. If that line is blank or shows a loss,
enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.
Subtract line 6 from line 5. If zero or less, enter -0- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.
Add lines 11 and 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13.
Long-term capital loss carryover to 2007. Subtract line 13 from line 10. If zero or less, enter -0-. If this
is the final return of the estate or trust, also enter on Schedule K-1 (Form 1041), box 11, using code C
14.
A collectibles gain or loss is any
long-term gain or deductible long-term
loss from the sale or exchange of a
collectible that is a capital asset.
Collectibles includes works of art,
rugs, antiques, metals (such as gold,
silver, and platinum bullion), gems,
stamps, coins, alcoholic beverages, and
certain other tangible property.
Also include gain (but not loss) from
the sale or exchange of an interest in a
partnership, S corporation, or trust held
for more than 1 year and attributable to
unrealized appreciation of collectibles.
For details, see Regulations section
1.1(h)-1. Also attach the statement
required under Regulations section
1.1(h)-1(e).
Part IV—Capital Loss
Limitation
If the sum of all the capital losses is more
than the sum of all the capital gains, then
these capital losses are allowed as a
deduction only to the extent of the smaller
of the net loss or $3,000.
For any year (including the final year)
in which capital losses exceed capital
gains, the estate or trust may have a
capital loss carryover. Use the Capital
Loss Carryover Worksheet (above) to
figure any capital loss carryover. A capital
loss carryover may be carried forward
indefinitely. Capital losses keep their
character as either short-term or
long-term when carried over to the
following year.
Part V—Tax Computation
Using Maximum Capital Gains
Rates
• Created before March 1, 1984, unless
Line 22
An accumulation distribution is the
excess of amounts properly paid,
credited, or required to be distributed
(other than income required to be
distributed currently) over the DNI of the
trust reduced by income required to be
distributed currently. To have an
accumulation distribution, the distribution
must exceed the accounting income of
the trust.
If the estate or trust received capital gains
or qualified dividends that were derived
from income in respect of a decedent and
a section 691(c) deduction was claimed,
you must reduce line 22 (line 10 of the
Schedule D Tax Worksheet, if applicable)
by the portion of the section 691(c)
deduction claimed on Form 1041, page 1,
line 19 that is attributable to the amount
on Schedule D, line 22 (or line 10 of the
Schedule D Tax Worksheet, if applicable).
Line 35
If the tax using the maximum capital gains
rates is less than the regular tax, enter
the amount from line 35 on line 1a of
Schedule G, Form 1041.
Schedule D Tax Worksheet
If you completed the Schedule D Tax
Worksheet instead of Part V of Schedule
D, be sure to enter the amount from line
37 of the worksheet on line 1a of
Schedule G, Form 1041.
Schedule J (Form 1041) —
Accumulation Distribution
for Certain Complex Trusts
General Instructions
Use Schedule J (Form 1041) to report an
accumulation distribution for a domestic
complex trust that was:
• Previously treated at any time as a
foreign trust (unless an exception is
provided in future regulations), or
-39-
that trust would not be aggregated with
other trusts under the rules of section
643(f) if that section applied to the trust.
Specific Instructions
Part I—Accumulation Distribution
in 2006
Line 1—Distribution Under Section
661(a)(2)
Enter the amount from Schedule B of
Form 1041, line 10, for 2006. This is the
amount properly paid, credited, or
required to be distributed other than the
amount of income for the current tax year
required to be distributed currently.
Line 2—Distributable Net Income
Enter the amount from Schedule B of
Form 1041, line 7, for 2006. This is the
amount of distributable net income (DNI)
for the current tax year determined under
section 643(a).
Line 3—Distribution Under Section
661(a)(1)
Enter the amount from Schedule B of
Form 1041, line 9, for 2006. This is the
amount of income for the current tax year
required to be distributed currently.
Page 40 of 48
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Line 5—Accumulation Distribution
If line 11, Schedule B of Form 1041 is
more than line 8, Schedule B of Form
1041, complete the rest of Schedule J
and file it with Form 1041, unless the trust
has no previously accumulated income.
Generally, amounts accumulated
before a beneficiary reaches age 21 may
be excluded by the beneficiary. See
sections 665 and 667(c) for exceptions
relating to multiple trusts. The trustee
reports to the IRS the total amount of the
accumulation distribution before any
reduction for income accumulated before
the beneficiary reaches age 21. If the
multiple trust rules do not apply, the
beneficiary claims the exclusion when
filing Form 4970, Tax on Accumulation
Distribution of Trusts, as you may not be
aware that the beneficiary may be a
beneficiary of other trusts with other
trustees.
For examples of accumulation
distributions that include payments from
one trust to another trust, and amounts
distributed for a dependent’s support, see
Regulations section 1.665(b)-1A(b).
Part II—Ordinary Income
Accumulation Distribution
Enter the applicable year at the top of
each column for each throwback year.
Line 6—Distributable Net Income
for Earlier Years
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback
year(s)
1969 – 1977
1978 – 1979
1980 . . . .
1981 – 1982
1983 – 1996
1997 – 2005
Amount from line
.
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.
. Schedule C, Form 1041, line 5
.
Form 1041, line 61
.
Form 1041, line 60
.
Form 1041, line 58
. Schedule B, Form 1041, line 9
. Schedule B, Form 1041, line 7
For information about throwback
years, see the instructions for line 13. For
purposes of line 6, in figuring the DNI of
the trust for a throwback year, subtract
any estate tax deduction for income in
respect of a decedent if the income is
includible in figuring the DNI of the trust
for that year.
Line 7—Distributions Made During
Earlier Years
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback
year(s)
1969 – 1977
1978 . . . .
1979 . . . .
1980 . . . .
1981 – 1982
1983 – 1996
1997 – 2005
Amount from line
.
.
.
.
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.
. Schedule C, Form 1041, line 8
.
Form 1041, line 64
.
Form 1041, line 65
.
Form 1041, line 64
.
Form 1041, line 62
. Schedule B, Form 1041, line 13
. Schedule B, Form 1041, line 11
Line 11—Prior Accumulation
Distribution Thrown Back to any
Throwback Year
Enter the amount of prior accumulation
distributions thrown back to the throwback
years. Do not enter distributions excluded
under section 663(a)(1) for gifts,
bequests, etc.
Line 13—Throwback Years
Allocate the amount on line 5 that is an
accumulation distribution to the earliest
applicable year first, but do not allocate
more than the amount on line 12 for any
throwback year. An accumulation
distribution is thrown back first to the
earliest preceding tax year in which there
is undistributed net income (UNI). Then, it
is thrown back beginning with the next
earliest year to any remaining preceding
tax years of the trust. The portion of the
accumulation distribution allocated to the
earliest preceding tax year is the amount
of the UNI for that year. The portion of the
accumulation distribution allocated to any
remaining preceding tax year is the
amount by which the accumulation
distribution is larger than the total of the
UNI for all earlier preceding tax years.
A tax year of a trust during which the
trust was a simple trust for the entire year
is not a preceding tax year unless (a)
during that year the trust received outside
income, or (b) the trustee did not
distribute all of the trust’s income that was
required to be distributed currently for that
year. In this case, UNI for that year must
not be more than the greater of the
outside income or income not distributed
during that year.
The term “outside income” means
amounts that are included in the DNI of
the trust for that year but that are not
“income” of the trust as defined in
Regulations section 1.643(b)-1. Some
examples of outside income are: (a)
income taxable to the trust under section
691; (b) unrealized accounts receivable
that were assigned to the trust; and (c)
distributions from another trust that
include the DNI or UNI of the other trust.
trust, see Regulations section
1.665(b)-1A.
Note. The alternative tax on capital gains
was repealed for tax years beginning after
December 31, 1978. The maximum rate
on net capital gain for 1981, 1987, and
1991 through 2005 is not an alternative
tax for this purpose.
Line 18—Regular Tax
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback
year(s)
1969 – 1976
1977 . . . .
1978 – 1979
1980 – 1984
1985 – 1986
1987 . . . .
1988 – 2005
Amount from line
.
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Form 1041, page 1, line 24
Form 1041, page 1, line 26
Form 1041, line 27
Form 1041, line 26c
Form 1041, line 25c
Form 1041, line 22c
Schedule G, Form 1041, line 1a
Line 19—Trust’s Share of Net
Short-Term Gain
For each throwback year, enter the
smaller of the capital gain from the two
lines indicated. If there is a capital loss or
a zero on either or both of the two lines
indicated, enter zero on line 19.
Throwback
year(s)
Amount from line
1969 – 1970
Schedule D, line 10, column 2, or
Schedule D, line 12, column 2
Schedule D, line 14, column 2, or
Schedule D, line 16, column 2
Schedule D, line 18, column (b), or
Schedule D, line 20, column (b)
Schedule D, line 14, column (b), or
Schedule D, line 16, column (b)
Schedule D, line 16, column (b), or
Schedule D, line 18, column (b)
Schedule D, line 15, column (b), or
Schedule D, line 17, column (b)
1971 – 1978
1979 . . . . .
1980 – 1981
1982 . . . . .
1983 – 1996
1997 – 2002
2003 . . . . .
Schedule D, line 14, column (2), or
Schedule D, line 16, column (2)
Schedule D, line 14a, column (2), or
Schedule D, line 16a, column (2)
Schedule D, line 13, column (2), or
Schedule D, line 15, column (2)
Line 16—Tax-Exempt Interest
Included on Line 13
2004 – 2005
For each throwback year, divide line 15
by line 6 and multiply the result by the
following:
Line 20—Trust’s Share of Net
Long-Term Gain
Throwback
year(s)
Throwback
year(s)
1969 – 1977
1978 – 1979
1980 . . . .
1981 – 1982
1983 – 2005
Amount from line
.
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.
.
. Schedule C, Form 1041, line 2(a)
.
Form 1041, line 58(a)
.
Form 1041, line 57(a)
.
Form 1041, line 55(a)
.
Schedule B, Form 1041, line 2
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
1969 – 1970 . . . . . .
50% of Schedule D, line 13(e)
1971 – 1977 . . . . . .
50% of Schedule D, line 17(e)
1978 . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule D, line 17(e), or line
31, whichever is applicable,
less Form 1041, line 23
Schedule D, line 25 or line 27,
whichever is applicable, less
Form 1041, line 23
Schedule D, line 21, less
Schedule D, line 22
Schedule D, line 23, less
Schedule D, line 24
Schedule D, line 22, less
Schedule D, line 23
Schedule D, the smaller
of any gain on line 16
or line 17, column (b)
Part III—Taxes Imposed on
Undistributed Net Income
1979 . . . . . . . . . .
For the regular tax computation, if there is
a capital gain, complete lines 18 through
25 for each throwback year. If the trustee
elected the alternative tax on capital
gains, complete lines 26 through 31
instead of lines 18 through 25 for each
applicable year. If there is no capital gain
for any year, or there is a capital loss for
every year, enter on line 9 the amount of
the tax for each year identified in the
instruction for line 18 and do not complete
Part III. If the trust received an
accumulation distribution from another
1980 – 1981 . . . . . .
-40-
Amount from line
1982 . . . . . . . . . .
1983 – 1986 . . . . . .
1987 – 1996 . . . . . .
1997 – 2001 . . . . . .
Schedule D, the smaller
of any gain on line 15c or
line 16, column (2)
2002 . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule D, the smaller
of any gain on line 15a or
Page 41 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Throwback
year(s)
Amount from line
line 16, column (2)
2003 . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule D, the smaller
of any gain on line 15a or
line 16a, column (2)
Schedule D, the smaller
of any gain on line 14a
or line 15, column (2)
2004 – 2005 . . . . . .
Line 22—Taxable Income
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback
year(s)
1969 – 1976
1977 . . . .
1978 – 1979
1980 – 1984
1985 – 1986
1987 . . . .
1988 – 1996
1997 . . . .
1998 – 2005
Amount from line
.
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. Form 1041, page 1, line 23
. Form 1041, page 1, line 25
.
Form 1041, line 26
.
Form 1041, line 25
.
Form 1041, line 24
.
Form 1041, line 21
.
Form 1041, line 22
.
Form 1041, line 23
.
Form 1041, line 22
Line 26—Tax on Income Other
Than Long-Term Capital Gain
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback
year(s)
1969 . . . .
1970 . . . .
1971 . . . .
1972 – 1975
1976 – 1978
Amount from line
.
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Schedule D, line 20
Schedule D, line 19
Schedule D, line 50
Schedule D, line 48
Schedule D, line 27
Line 27—Trust’s Share of Net
Short-Term Gain
If there is a loss on any of the following
lines, enter zero on line 27 for the
applicable throwback year. Otherwise,
enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback
year(s)
Amount from line
1969 – 1970 . . . .
1971 – 1978 . . . .
Schedule D, line 10, column 2
Schedule D, line 14, column 2
Line 28—Trust’s Share of Taxable
Income Less Section 1202
Deduction
Enter the applicable amounts as follows:
Throwback year(s)
1969 . . . .
1970 . . . .
1971 . . . .
1972 – 1975
1976 – 1978
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Amount from line
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Schedule D, line 19
Schedule D, line 18
Schedule D, line 38
Schedule D, line 39
Schedule D, line 21
Part IV—Allocation to
Beneficiary
Complete Part IV for each beneficiary. If
the accumulation distribution is allocated
to more than one beneficiary, attach an
additional copy of Schedule J with Part IV
completed for each additional beneficiary.
Give each beneficiary a copy of his or her
respective Part IV information. If more
than 5 throwback years are involved, use
another Schedule J, completing Parts II
and III for each additional throwback year.
If the beneficiary is a nonresident alien
individual or a foreign corporation, see
section 667(e) about retaining the
character of the amounts distributed to
determine the amount of the U.S.
withholding tax.
The beneficiary uses Form 4970 to
figure the tax on the distribution. The
beneficiary also uses Form 4970 for the
section 667(b)(6) tax adjustment if an
accumulation distribution is subject to
estate or generation-skipping transfer tax.
This is because the trustee may not be
the estate or generation-skipping transfer
tax return filer.
Schedule K-1 (Form
1041)— Beneficiary’s
Share of Income,
Deductions, Credits, etc.
General Instructions
Use Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) to report
the beneficiary’s share of income,
deductions, and credits from a trust or a
decedent’s estate.
Grantor type trusts do not use
Schedule K-1 (Form 1041) to
CAUTION report the income, deductions, or
credits of the grantor (or other person
treated as owner). See Special Filing
Instructions for Grantor Type Trusts,
Pooled Income Funds, and Electing Small
Business Trusts on page 5.
!
Who Must File
The fiduciary (or one of the joint
fiduciaries) must file Schedule K-1. A
copy of each beneficiary’s Schedule K-1
is attached to the Form 1041 filed with the
IRS and each beneficiary is given a copy
of his or her respective Schedule K-1.
One copy of each Schedule K-1 must be
retained for the fiduciary’s records.
Beneficiary’s Identifying Number
As a payer of income, you are required to
request and provide a proper identifying
number for each recipient of income.
Enter the beneficiary’s number on the
respective Schedule K-1 when you file
Form 1041. Individuals and business
recipients are responsible for giving you
their TIN upon request. You may use
Form W-9, Request for Taxpayer
Identification Number and Certification, to
request the beneficiary’s identifying
number.
Penalty. You may be charged a $50
penalty for each failure to provide a
required TIN, unless reasonable cause is
established for not providing it. Explain
any reasonable cause in a signed affidavit
and attach it to this return.
Tax Shelter Identification Number
See Form 8271, Investor Reporting of
Tax Shelter Registration Number, for
information regarding the fiduciary’s
reporting requirements.
Substitute Forms
You do not need IRS approval to use a
substitute Schedule K-1 if it is an exact
copy of the IRS schedule. The boxes
must use the same numbers and titles
-41-
and must be in the same order and format
as on the comparable IRS Schedule K-1.
The substitute schedule must include the
OMB number and the 6-digit form ID code
in the upper right hand corner of the
schedule.
You must provide each beneficiary
with the Instructions for Beneficiary Filing
Form 1040 or other prepared specific
instructions for each item reported on the
beneficiary’s Schedule K-1.
Inclusion of Amounts in
Beneficiaries’ Income
Simple trust. The beneficiary of a simple
trust must include in his or her gross
income the amount of the income
required to be distributed currently,
whether or not distributed, or if the
income required to be distributed
currently to all beneficiaries exceeds the
distributable net income (DNI), his or her
proportionate share of the DNI. The
determination of whether trust income is
required to be distributed currently
depends on the terms of the trust
instrument and applicable local law. See
Regulations section 1.652(c)-4 for a
comprehensive example.
Estates and complex trusts. The
beneficiary of a decedent’s estate or
complex trust must include in his or her
gross income the sum of:
1. The amount of the income required
to be distributed currently, or if the income
required to be distributed currently to all
beneficiaries exceeds the DNI (figured
without taking into account the charitable
deduction), his or her proportionate share
of the DNI (as so figured), and
2. All other amounts properly paid,
credited, or required to be distributed, or if
the sum of the income required to be
distributed currently and other amounts
properly paid, credited, or required to be
distributed to all beneficiaries exceeds the
DNI, his or her proportionate share of the
excess of DNI over the income required
to be distributed currently.
See Regulations section 1.662(c)-4 for
a comprehensive example.
For complex trusts that have more
than one beneficiary, and if different
beneficiaries have substantially separate
and independent shares, their shares are
treated as separate trusts for the sole
purpose of determining the amount of DNI
allocable to the respective beneficiaries.
A similar rule applies to treat substantially
separate and independent shares of
different beneficiaries of an estate as
separate estates. For examples of the
application of the separate share rule, see
the regulations under section 663(c).
Gifts and bequests. Do not include in
the beneficiary’s income any gifts or
bequests of a specific sum of money or of
specific property under the terms of the
governing instrument that are paid or
credited in three installments or less.
Amounts that can be paid or credited
only from income of the estate or trust do
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not qualify as a gift or bequest of a
specific sum of money.
Past years. Do not include in the
beneficiary’s income any amounts
deducted on Form 1041 for an earlier
year that were credited or required to be
distributed in that earlier year.
Character of income. The beneficiary’s
income is considered to have the same
proportion of each class of items entering
into the computation of DNI that the total
of each class has to the DNI (for example,
half dividends and half interest if the
income of the estate or trust is half
dividends and half interest).
Allocation of deductions. Generally,
items of deduction that enter into the
computation of DNI are allocated among
the items of income to the extent such
allocation is not inconsistent with the rules
set out in section 469 and its regulations,
relating to passive activity loss limitations,
in the following order.
First, all deductions directly attributable
to a specific class of income are deducted
from that income. For example, rental
expenses, to the extent allowable, are
deducted from rental income.
Second, deductions that are not
directly attributable to a specific class of
income generally may be allocated to any
class of income, as long as a reasonable
portion is allocated to any tax-exempt
income. Deductions considered not
directly attributable to a specific class of
income under this rule include fiduciary
fees, safe deposit box rental charges, and
state income and personal property taxes.
The charitable deduction, however, must
be ratably apportioned among each class
of income included in DNI.
Finally, any excess deductions that are
directly attributable to a class of income
may be allocated to another class of
income. However, in no case can excess
deductions from a passive activity be
allocated to income from a nonpassive
activity, or to portfolio income earned by
the estate or trust. Excess deductions
attributable to tax-exempt income cannot
offset any other class of income.
In no case can deductions be allocated
to an item of income that is not included
in the computation of DNI, or attributable
to corpus.
You cannot show any negative
amounts for any class of income shown in
boxes 1 through 8 of Schedule K-1.
However, for the final year of the estate or
trust, certain deductions or losses can be
passed through to the beneficiary(ies).
See the instructions for box 11 for more
information on these deductions and
losses. Also, the beneficiary’s share of
depreciation and depletion is apportioned
separately. These deductions may be
allocated to the beneficiary(ies) in
amounts greater than their income. See
Depreciation, Depletion, and Amortization
on page 15 and Rev. Rul. 74-530, 1974-2
C.B. 188.
Beneficiary’s Tax Year
Item E
The beneficiary’s income from the estate
or trust must be included in the
beneficiary’s tax year during which the tax
year of the estate or trust ends. See Pub.
559 for more information, including the
effect of the death of a beneficiary during
the tax year of the estate or trust.
If this is the final year of the estate or
trust, you must check this box.
Note. If this is the final K-1 for the
beneficiary, check the “Final K-1” box at
the top of Schedule K-1.
General Reporting Information
If the return is for a fiscal year or a short
tax year, fill in the tax year space at the
top of each Schedule K-1. On each
Schedule K-1, enter the information about
the estate or trust and the beneficiary in
Parts I and II (items A through J). In Part
III, enter the beneficiary’s share of each
item of income, deduction, credit, and any
other information the beneficiary needs to
file their income tax return.
Item F
If the estate or trust is a
registration-required tax shelter, you must
check this box and enter the tax shelter
registration number in Item F.
Item G
If the estate or trust has invested in a
registration-required tax shelter, you must
check this box and furnish a copy of its
Form 8271, Investor Reporting of Tax
Shelter Registration Number, to the
beneficiary(ies).
Codes. In box 9 and boxes 11 through
14, identify each item by entering a code
in the column to the left of the entry space
for the dollar amount. These codes are
identified in these instructions and on the
back of the Schedule K-1.
Part II. Information About the
Beneficiary
Attached statements. Enter an asterisk
(*) after the code, if any, in the column to
the left of the dollar amount entry space
for each item for which you have attached
a statement providing additional
information. For those informational items
that cannot be reported as a single dollar
amount, enter the code and asterisk in
the left-hand column and enter “STMT” in
the entry space to the right to indicate that
the information is provided on an attached
statement. More than one attached
statement can be placed on the same
sheet of paper and should be identified in
alphanumeric order by box number
followed by the letter code (if any). For
example: “Box 9, Code A — Depreciation”
(followed by the information the
beneficiary needs).
Item J
Too few entry spaces on Schedule
K-1? If the estate or trust has more
coded items than the number of spaces in
box 9 or boxes 11 through 14, do not
enter a code or dollar amount in the last
entry space of the box. In the last entry
space, enter an asterisk in the left column
and enter “STMT” in the entry space to
the right. Report the additional items on
an attached statement and provide the
box number, the code, description, and
dollar amount or information for each
additional item. For example: “Box 13,
Code H — Alcohol Fuel Credit — $500.00.”
Specific Instructions
Part I. Information About the
Estate or Trust
On each Schedule K-1, enter the name,
address, and identifying number of the
estate or trust. Also, enter the name and
address of the fiduciary.
Item D
If the fiduciary of a trust or decedent’s
estate filed Form 1041-T, you must check
this box and enter the date it was filed.
-42-
Complete a Schedule K-1 for each
beneficiary. On each Schedule K-1, enter
the beneficiary’s name, address, and
identifying number.
Check the foreign beneficiary box if the
beneficiary is a nonresident alien
individual, foreign corporation, or a
foreign estate or trust. Otherwise, check
the domestic beneficiary box.
Part III. Beneficiary’s Share of
Current Year Income,
Deductions, Credits, and Other
Items
Box 1—Interest
Enter the beneficiary’s share of the
taxable interest income minus allocable
deductions.
Box 2a—Total Ordinary Dividends
Enter the beneficiary’s share of ordinary
dividends minus allocable deductions.
Box 3—Net Short-Term Capital
Gain
Enter the beneficiary’s share of the net
short-term capital gain from line 13,
column (1), Schedule D (Form 1041),
minus allocable deductions. Do not enter
a loss on line 3. If, for the final year of the
estate or trust, there is a capital loss
carryover, enter in box 11, using code B,
the beneficiary’s share of short-term
capital loss carryover. However, if the
beneficiary is a corporation, enter in box
11, using code B, the beneficiary’s share
of all short- and long-term capital loss
carryovers as a single item. See section
642(h) and related regulations for more
information.
Boxes 4a through 4c —Net
Long-Term Capital Gain
Enter the beneficiary’s share of the net
long-term capital gain from lines 14a
through 14c, column (1), Schedule D
(Form 1041) minus allocable deductions.
Do not enter a loss in boxes 4a
through 4c. If, for the final year of the
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estate or trust, there is a capital loss
carryover, enter in box 11, using code C,
the beneficiary’s share of the long-term
capital loss carryover. (If the beneficiary is
a corporation, see the instructions for line
3.) See section 642(h) and related
regulations for more information.
Gains or losses from the complete or
partial disposition of a rental, rental real
estate, or trade or business activity that is
a passive activity, must be shown on an
attachment to Schedule K-1.
Box 5—Other Portfolio and
Nonbusiness Income
Enter the beneficiary’s share of annuities,
royalties, or any other income, minus
allocable deductions (other than directly
apportionable deductions), that is not
subject to any passive activity loss
limitation rules at the beneficiary level.
Use boxes 6 through 8 to report income
items subject to the passive activity rules
at the beneficiary’s level.
Boxes 6 through 8 —Ordinary
Business Income, Rental Real
Estate, and Other Rental Income
Enter the beneficiary’s share of trade or
business, rental real estate, and other
rental income, minus allocable deductions
(other than directly apportionable
deductions). To assist the beneficiary in
figuring any applicable passive activity
loss limitations, also attach a separate
schedule showing the beneficiary’s share
of income derived from each trade or
business, rental real estate, and other
rental activity.
Box 9—Directly Apportioned
Deductions
The limitations on passive activity
losses and credits under section
CAUTION 469 apply to estates and trusts.
Estates and trusts that distribute income
to beneficiaries are allowed to apportion
depreciation, depletion, and amortization
deductions to the beneficiaries. These
deductions are referred to as “directly
apportionable deductions.”
Rules for treating a beneficiary’s
income and directly apportionable
deductions from an estate or trust and
other rules for applying the passive loss
and credit limitations to beneficiaries of
estates and trusts have not yet been
issued.
Any directly apportionable deduction,
such as depreciation, is treated by the
beneficiary as having been incurred in the
same activity as incurred by the estate or
trust. However, the character of such
deduction may be determined as if the
beneficiary incurred the deduction
directly.
To assist the beneficiary in figuring any
applicable passive activity loss limitations,
also attach a separate schedule showing
the beneficiary’s share of directly
apportionable deductions derived from
each trade or business, rental real estate,
and other rental activity.
!
Enter the beneficiary’s share of directly
apportioned deductions using codes A
through C.
Depreciation (code A). Enter the
beneficiary’s share of the depreciation
deductions directly apportioned to each
activity reported in boxes 5 through 8.
See the instructions on page 16 for a
discussion of how the depreciation
deduction is apportioned between the
beneficiaries and the estate or trust.
Report any AMT adjustment or tax
preference item attributable to
depreciation separately in box 12, using
code G.
Note. An estate or trust cannot make an
election under section 179 to expense
certain tangible property.
Depletion (code B). Enter the
beneficiary’s share of the depletion
deduction under section 611 directly
apportioned to each activity reported in
boxes 5 through 8. See the instructions
on page 16 for a discussion of how the
depletion deduction is apportioned
between the beneficiaries and the estate
or trust. Report any tax preference item
attributable to depletion separately in box
12, using code H.
Amortization (code C). Itemize the
beneficiary’s share of the amortization
deductions directly apportioned to each
activity reported in boxes 5 through 8.
Apportion the amortization deductions
between the estate or trust and the
beneficiaries in the same way that the
depreciation and depletion deductions are
divided. Report any AMT adjustment
attributable to amortization separately in
box 12, using code I.
Box 10—Estate Tax Deduction
(Including Certain
Generation-Skipping Transfer
Taxes)
If the distribution deduction consists of
any income in respect of a decedent, and
the estate or trust was allowed a
deduction under section 691(c) for the
estate tax paid attributable to such
income (see the line 19 instructions on
page 19), then the beneficiary is allowed
an estate tax deduction in proportion to
his or her share of the distribution that
consists of such income. For an example
of the computation, see Regulations
section 1.691(c)-2. Figure the
computation on a separate sheet and
attach it to the return.
Box 11, Code A —Excess
Deductions on Termination
If this is the final return of the estate or
trust, and there are excess deductions on
termination (see the instructions for line
22 on page 19), enter the beneficiary’s
share of the excess deductions in box 11,
using code A. Figure the deductions on a
separate sheet and attach it to the return.
Excess deductions on termination
occur only during the last tax year of the
trust or decedent’s estate when the total
deductions (excluding the charitable
deduction and exemption) are greater
-43-
than the gross income during that tax
year.
Generally, a deduction based on an
NOL carryover is not available to a
beneficiary as an excess deduction.
However, if the last tax year of the estate
or trust is also the last year in which an
NOL carryover may be taken (see section
172(b)), the NOL carryover is considered
an excess deduction on the termination of
the estate or trust to the extent it is not
absorbed by the estate or trust during its
final tax year. For more information, see
Regulations section 1.642(h)-4 for a
discussion of the allocation of the
carryover among the beneficiaries.
Only the beneficiary of an estate or
trust that succeeds to its property is
allowed to deduct that entity’s excess
deductions on termination. A beneficiary
who does not have enough income in that
year to absorb the entire deduction may
not carry the balance over to any
succeeding year. An individual beneficiary
must be able to itemize deductions in
order to claim the excess deductions in
determining taxable income.
Box 11, Codes B and C —Unused
Capital Loss Carryover
Upon termination of the trust or
decedent’s estate, the beneficiary
succeeding to the property is allowed as a
deduction any unused capital loss
carryover under section 1212. If the
estate or trust incurs capital losses in the
final year, use the Capital Loss Carryover
Worksheet on page 39 to figure the
amount of capital loss carryover to be
allocated to the beneficiary.
Box 11, Codes D and E —Net
Operating Loss (NOL) Carryover
Upon termination of a trust or decedent’s
estate, a beneficiary succeeding to its
property is allowed to deduct any unused
NOL (and any ATNOL) carryover for
regular and AMT purposes if the
carryover would be allowable to the
estate or trust in a later tax year but for
the termination. Enter in box 11, using
codes D and E, the unused carryover
amounts.
Box 12—Alternative Minimum Tax
Items
Adjustment for minimum tax purposes
(code A). Enter the beneficiary’s share of
the adjustment for minimum tax purposes.
To figure the adjustment, subtract the
beneficiary’s share of the income
distribution deduction figured on Schedule
B, line 15, from the beneficiary’s share of
the income distribution deduction on a
minimum tax basis figured on Schedule I,
line 44. The difference is the beneficiary’s
share of the adjustment for minimum tax
purposes.
Note. Schedule B, line 15 equals the
sum of all Schedule K-1s, box 1, 2a, 3,
4a, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
AMT adjustment attributable to
qualified dividends, net short-term
capital gains, or net long-term capital
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gains (codes B through D). If any part
of the amount reported in box 12, code A,
is attributable to qualified dividends (code
B), net short-term capital gain (code C),
or net long-term capital gain (code D),
enter that part using the applicable code.
AMT adjustment attributable to
unrecaptured section 1250 gain or 28%
rate gain (codes E and F). Enter the
beneficiary’s distributive share of any
AMT adjustments to the unrecaptured
section 1250 gain (code E) or 28% rate
gain (code F), whichever is applicable, in
box 12.
Accelerated depreciation, depletion,
and amortization (codes G through I).
Enter any adjustments or tax preference
items attributable to depreciation,
depletion, or amortization that were
directly apportioned to the beneficiary.
For property placed in service before
1987, report separately the accelerated
depreciation of real and leased personal
property.
Exclusion Items (code J). Enter the
beneficiary’s share of the adjustment for
minimum tax purposes from Schedule
K-1, box 12, code A, that is attributable to
exclusion items (Schedule I, lines 2
through 6 and 8).
Box 13—Credits and Credit
Recapture
Enter each beneficiary’s share of the
credits and credit recapture using the
applicable codes. Listed below are the
credits that can be allocated to the
beneficiary(ies). Attach a statement if
additional information must be provided to
the beneficiary as explained below.
• Credit for estimated taxes (code A) —
Payment of estimated tax to be credited
to the beneficiary (section 643(g)).
See the instructions for line 24b
on page 20 before you make an
CAUTION entry to allocate any estimated tax
payments to a beneficiary. If the fiduciary
does not make a valid election, then the
IRS will disallow the estimated tax
payment that is reported on Schedule K-1
and claimed on the beneficiary’s return.
• Credit for backup withholding (code B).
• The low-income housing credit
(code C).
• Qualified rehabilitation expenditures
(code D). Attach a statement that shows
the amount and corresponding line on
Form 3468 for reporting each type of
expenditure.
!
• Basis of other investment credit
property (code E). Attach a statement that
shows the basis of and corresponding
lines for reporting property qualifying for
the energy credit, qualifying advanced
coal project credit, and qualifying
gasification project credit. If the statement
shows an amount for line 2c, it must also
include an amount to enter on line 2d,
and if it shows an amount for line 2f, it
must also include an amount to enter on
line 2g.
• Work opportunity credit (code F).
• Welfare-to-work credit (code G).
• Alcohol fuel credit (code H). If the credit
includes the small ethanol producer
credit, attach a statement that shows the
beneficiary’s share of the small ethanol
producer credit, the number of gallons
claimed for the small ethanol producer
credit, and the estate’s or trust’s
productive capacity for alcohol.
• Credit for increasing research activities
(code I).
• Renewable electricity, refined coal, and
Indian coal production credit (code J).
Attach a statement that shows the
amount of the credit the beneficiary must
report on line 9 and line 23 of Form 8835,
in case the beneficiary is required to file
that form in addition to Form 3800.
• Empowerment zone and renewal
community employment credit (code K).
• Indian employment credit (code L).
• Orphan drug credit (code M).
• Credit for employer provided child care
and facilities (code N).
• Biodiesel and renewable diesel fuels
credit (code O). If the credit includes the
small agri-biodiesel credit, attach a
statement that shows the beneficiary’s
share of the small agri-biodiesel credit,
the number of gallons claimed for the
small agri-biodiesel credit, and the
estate’s or trust’s productive capacity for
agri-biodiesel.
• Nonconventional source fuel credit
(code P).
• Clean renewable energy bond and Gulf
tax credit bond credits (code Q). Attach a
statement that shows the amount of the
credit the beneficiary must report on line 3
and line 9 of Form 8912.
• Credits for employers affected by
Hurricane Katrina, Rita, or Wilma (code
R). Attach a statement that shows the
amount of the credit the beneficiary must
report on line 3 and line 7 of Form
-44-
5884-A, in case the beneficiary is
required to file that form in addition to
Form 3800.
• Energy efficient appliance credit (code
S).
• Recapture of credits (code T). On an
attached statement to Schedule K-1,
provide any information the beneficiary
will need to report recapture of credits.
Box 14—Other Information
Enter the dollar amounts and applicable
codes for the items listed under Other
Information.
Domestic production activities
information. The estate or trust allocates
qualified production activity income
(QPAI) (whether positive or negative) and
Form W-2 wages based on the relative
proportion of the trust’s or estate’s DNI
that is distributed or required to be
distributed to the beneficiary. If the estate
or trust has no DNI for the tax year, QPAI
and Form W-2 wages are allocated
entirely to the estate or trust.
Qualified production activities
income (code C). Enter the beneficiary’s
share, if any, of the estate’s or trust’s
QPAI. The QPAI will be less than zero if
the cost of goods sold and deductions
allocated and apportioned to domestic
production gross receipts (DPGR) is more
than the estate’s or trust’s DPGR. See
Form 8903, Domestic Production
Activities Deduction, and its instructions
for more details.
Form W-2 wages (code D). Use
code D to report the beneficiary’s share, if
any, of Form W-2 wages. Do not enter
more than 6% of the beneficiary’s share,
if any, of the estate’s or trust’s QPAI. See
Form 8903 and its instructions for more
details.
Foreign trading gross receipts
(code G). Enter the beneficiary’s share, if
any, of foreign trading gross receipts. See
Form 8873, Extraterritorial Income
Exclusion, for more information.
Other Information (code H). List on a
separate sheet the tax information the
beneficiary will need to complete their
return that is not entered elsewhere on
Schedule K-1.
!
CAUTION
Income tax withheld on wages
cannot be distributed to the
beneficiary.
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Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
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Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction Act Notice. We ask for the information on this form to carry out the Internal Revenue laws
of the United States. You are required to give us the information. We need it to ensure that you are complying with these laws and to
allow us to figure and collect the right amount of tax. Section 6109 requires return preparers to provide their identifying numbers on
the return.
You are not required to provide the information requested on a form that is subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act unless the
form displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records relating to a form or its instructions must be retained as long as their
contents may become material in the administration of any Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax returns and return information are
confidential, as required by Code section 6103.
The time needed to complete and file this form and related schedules will vary depending on individual circumstances. The
estimated average times are:
Form 1041
Recordkeeping
Learning about the law
or the form
Preparing the form
Copying, assembling, and sending the
form to the IRS
Schedule D
Schedule D Tax
Worksheet
Schedule J
Schedule K-1
52 hr., 49 min.
23 hr., 54 min.
12 hr., 12 min.
39 hr., 27 min.
7 hr., 10 min.
20 hr., 39 min.
38 hr., 14 min.
2 hr., 29 min.
3 hr., 18 min.
---12 min.
1 hr., 17 min.
1 hr., 59 min.
1 hr., 57 min.
3 hr., 5 min.
4 hr., 34 min.
----
----
----
16 min.
If you have comments concerning the accuracy of these time estimates or suggestions for making this form and related
schedules simpler, we would be happy to hear from you. You can write to the Internal Revenue Service, Tax Products Coordinating
Committee, SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP, 1111 Constitution Ave. NW, IR-6406, Washington, DC 20224. Do not send the tax form to this
address. Instead, see Where To File on page 48.
-45-
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Index
A
Accounting income . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
AGI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Alaska Native Settlement
Trusts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Allowable miscellaneous itemized
deductions (AMID) . . . . . . . . . 18
Alternative minimum tax . . . . . . 26
Amended return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Amounts paid or permanently set
aside . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Assembly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Attachments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
B
Bankruptcy estate . . . . . . . . . . 5, 13
Bankruptcy information . . . . . . . 11
Basis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Beneficiary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Allocation of estimated tax
payment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9, 20
Complex trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Simple trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Tax year for inclusion . . . . . . . 42
Withholding on foreign
person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Blind trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
C
Capital asset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Capital loss limitation . . . . . . . . . 39
Cemetery perpetual care
fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Charitable deduction . . . . . . . . . . 21
Collectibles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Common trust fund . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
D
Definitions:
Accumulation
distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Beneficiary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Complex trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Decedent’s estate . . . . . . . . . . 12
DNI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Fiduciary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Grantor trusts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Income in respect of a
decedent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Outside income . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Pooled income fund . . . . . . . . 13
Simple trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Distributable net income (See
DNI)
DNI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 21
E
Electing small business
trusts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7, 24
ESBT (S portion only) . . . . . . 13
S portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Elections:
Out of installment
method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Rollover of gain from qualified
small business stock . . . . . 34
Section 643(e)(3) . . . . . . . 22, 33
Section 643(g) . . . . . . . . . . . 9, 20
Section 645 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Special rule for qualified
revocable trusts . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Treating contributions as paid in
prior tax year . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Electronic deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
ESBTs (See Electing small
business trusts)
Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3, 41
Bankruptcy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 13
Exemption for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Foreign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Who must file . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Estate tax deduction . . . . . . . . . . 19
Estimated tax . . . . . . . . . . 8, 20, 21
Allocation of payments to
beneficiaries . . . . . . . . . . . 8, 20
Penalty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Excess deductions . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Exemption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Extraterritorial income
exclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
F
Fiduciary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3, 8
Fiduciary accounting income (FAI)
(See Accounting income)
Final return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
First tier distributions . . . . . . . . . . 22
Foreign tax credit . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Form 1041-T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9, 20
Form 8855 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
G
General business credit . . . . . . . 24
Grantor trusts . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 5, 13
Backup withholding . . . . . . . . . . 7
Mortgage pools . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Nonqualified deferred
compensation plans . . . . . . 13
Optional filing methods . . . . . . 6
Pre-need funeral trusts . . . . . 13
Special filing instructions . . . . . 5
GST tax deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
I
Income distribution
deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 19, 21
Income in respect of a decedent
(See IRD)
Installment sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Elect out of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Inter vivos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 3
Interest income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
IRD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Final . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Nonexempt charitable
trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13, 14
Qualified settlement
funds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Split-interest trust . . . . . . . . . . . 14
When to file . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Who must file . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
L
Like-kind exchange . . . . . . . . . . . 35
S
Second tier distributions . . . . . . 22
Separate share rule . . . . . . . . . . 21
Special filing instructions:
Bankruptcy estates . . . . . . . . . 12
Electing small business
trusts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Grantor trusts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Pooled income funds . . . . . . . . 7
Split-interest trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Substitute forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
M
Minimum taxable income . . . . . . 19
Mortgage pools . . . . . . . . . . . 13, 14
Employer Identification
number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
N
Net operating loss . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Nonexempt charitable
deduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Nonexempt charitable
trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13, 21
Nonqualified deferred
compensation plans . . . . . . . . 13
P
Paid preparer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Paid preparer authorization . . . . 8
Penalties:
Estimated tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Failure to provide a required
TIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Failure to provide information
timely . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Late filing of return . . . . . . . . . . 9
Late payment of tax . . . . . . . . . 9
Other . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Trust fund recovery . . . . . . . . . . 9
Underpaid estimated tax . . . . . 9
Pooled income funds . . . . . . 7, 13,
21
Pre-need funeral trusts . . . . . . . . 13
Q
Qualified disability trust . . . . . . . 19
Qualified Dividends . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Qualified revocable trust . . . . . . . 3
Qualified settlement funds . . . . . . 5
Qualified small business
stock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22, 34
R
Returns:
Amended . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Common trust fund . . . . . . . . . . 5
Electronic and magnetic
media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
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T
Taxable income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Throwback years . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Trusts:
Alaska Native Settlement . . . . 5
Blind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Common trust fund . . . . . . . . . . 5
Complex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Domestic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Exemption for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Foreign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Grantor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Inter vivos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 3
Nonexempt charitable . . . . . 13,
14, 21
Pre-need funeral . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Qualified disability . . . . . . . . . . 19
Qualified revocable . . . . . . . . . . 3
Simple . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Split-interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Testamentary . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 3
Who must file . . . . . . . . . . . . 3, 41
U
Undistributed capital gains . . . . 35
Unrecaptured section 1250
gain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
W
Who must file:
Bankruptcy estate . . . . . . . . . . 11
Decedent’s estate . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Withholding on foreign
person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
■
Page 47 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
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Page 48 of 48
Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, G, I, J, and K-1
13:55 - 6-FEB-2007
The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.
Where to File
For all estates and trusts, including charitable and split-interest trusts and pooled income funds:
THEN use this address if you:
IF you are located in ...
Are not enclosing a check or
money order ...
Are enclosing a check or
money order ...
Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont,
Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin
Internal Revenue Service
Center, Cincinnati, Ohio
45999-0048
Internal Revenue Service
Center, Cincinnati, Ohio
45999-0148
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia,
Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon,
South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming
Internal Revenue Service
Center, Ogden, Utah
84201-0048
Internal Revenue Service
Center, Ogden, Utah
84201-0148
A foreign country or a United States possession
Internal Revenue Service
Center, Ogden, Utah
84201 – 0210
Internal Revenue Service
Center, Ogden, Utah
84201 – 0222
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File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | 2006 Instruction 1041 |
Subject | Instructions for Form 1041 and Schedules A, B, D, J and K-1 |
Author | W:CAR:MP:FP |
File Modified | 2007-02-06 |
File Created | 2007-02-06 |