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Saving for College in Trust Accounts: Types of Trusts and How They Work (page 4)

By Margaret A. Munro
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Section 2053(c) And 2053(b) Trusts For Minors

The only way a minor child can own securities outright is through a Uniform Gift to Minors Act (UGMA) account. One of the great drawbacks of this account, however, is that, at age 18 (or 21, depending on the state), the no-longer minor child now controls the account and everything in it to use as he or she determines.

To give parents and grandparents more control over the situation, you may also create trusts under Internal Revenue Code Section 2053(c) or (b), which allows you to save for that child until he or she reaches the age of 21. Unlike the Crummey trust, this trust doesn't require that you maintain the rather elaborate fiction of providing an opportunity for that child to take money out every time you put money in.

Instead, Section 2053(c) and (b) trusts to minors allow the grantor to create the premise of making annual exclusion gifts in the following ways:

  • Section 2053 (c) requires that the trust (all contributions plus all accumulated income) become completely payable to the beneficiary on his or her 21st birthday.
  • Section 2053 (b) requires that all income earned (but none of the contributions received from the grantor) is paid to the minor child every year that the trust is in effect.

You may wonder where the benefit lies in creating trusts of this type when you can achieve much the same result by using a UGMA/UTMA account. Well, when drafting the trust instrument, you can include language in it that allows you to change the trust to a Crummey trust when the beneficiary reaches age 21. Because staying away from grantor-trust rules when dealing with a minor child is especially difficult, formulating the trust as a Section 2053(c) or (b) trust during your child's minority and then changing it over after he or she becomes an adult allow you to neatly sidestep some unfavorable tax treatments.

Tackling Testamentary Trusts

As the name suggests, these trusts are created under, and through, your last will and testament. Because these trusts are governed by terms contained in your last will, and because your last will doesn't become truly effective until you die, a testamentary trust comes into being and is administered after your death. Beyond that, it functions in all ways exactly the same as an irrevocable inter vivos trust does. You may include the same provisions in your testamentary trust as you might in any other, especially regarding how, when, and to whom distributions are made.

For obvious reasons, funding a testamentary trust has no gift tax consequences; however, you may have estate tax consequences. To ensure that all your desires for your children and/or grandchildren are carried out after your death, make sure that a competent trust and estate attorney draws up your last will.

If your priority during life is being sure you have adequate resources for your own needs, and you haven't made lifetime gifts of significant pieces of wealth to your family, a testamentary trust may be the ticket. Rather than making specific bequests of money to your children, grandchildren, or other relatives, the terms of the trust govern how your money will be used, preventing your descendents from frittering away their legacies. Because you define what that money may be used for (education is always a nice choice) before you die, you ensure that your money is actually used for those purposes.

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