Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== The Ultimate Guide to a Non-Skip Person: Mastering the GST Tax ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is a Non-Skip Person? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine your family's wealth is a baton in a generational relay race. You are the current runner, and your goal is to pass this baton to the next generation. The most direct and expected move is to pass it to the next runner in line—your child. In the eyes of the U.S. tax code, your child is the "correct" next recipient. Now, imagine you try to skip that next runner and throw the baton two spots down the line directly to your grandchild. This move, called a "generation skip," allows your family to avoid the [[estate_tax]] that would have been paid when the baton passed through your child's hands. The [[internal_revenue_service]] (IRS) saw this "skip" as a tax loophole for wealthy families. To close it, they created a special referee with a very high penalty flag: the **Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax (GSTT)**. This tax specifically targets transfers that skip a generation. So, what is a **non-skip person**? In this relay race, a **non-skip person** is simply any person or entity that is **not** a "skip." They are the next runner in line, the generation right after you. Making a transfer to them is the standard, expected move, and it does **not** trigger the special GSTT penalty. Understanding this simple distinction is the key to an effective and tax-efficient [[estate_planning]] strategy. * **The Core Definition:** A **non-skip person** is any beneficiary of a gift or trust who is not two or more generations younger than the person giving the asset, most commonly a child, spouse, or sibling. [[internal_revenue_code]] * **The Financial Impact:** Transfers of wealth to a **non-skip person** are **not** subject to the separate, high-rate Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax (GSTT), which is a critical consideration in high-net-worth estate planning. [[generation-skipping_transfer_tax]] * **The Strategic Importance:** Correctly identifying who is a **non-skip person** is crucial for structuring trusts and making gifts to avoid accidentally triggering the costly GSTT, ensuring your wealth passes to your loved ones as you intend. [[trust_law]] ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of a Non-Skip Person ===== ==== The Story of the GSTT: A Historical Journey ==== The concept of a "non-skip person" doesn't exist in a vacuum. It was born out of a major tax reform aimed at ensuring fairness in how generational wealth is taxed. Before 1976, wealthy families could use a powerful tool: the "dynasty trust." A grandparent could place assets in a trust that would pay income to their child for life, but upon the child's death, the assets would pass directly to the grandchild, completely bypassing the child's estate for tax purposes. This could be repeated for generations, allowing vast fortunes to avoid [[estate_tax]] indefinitely. Congress viewed this as a significant loophole. They first attempted to address it in 1976, but the law was complex and widely seen as unworkable. The real change came with the **Tax Reform Act of 1986**. This landmark legislation retroactively repealed the 1976 law and introduced the modern [[generation-skipping_transfer_tax]] (GSTT) we know today. The core purpose of the 1986 act was to ensure that wealth is taxed at least once per generation. It established a parallel tax system that works alongside the [[gift_tax]] and estate tax. To do this, it had to create a clear way to identify when a generation was being "skipped." This led to the legal definitions of a **"skip person"** (someone two or more generations below the giver) and, by default, a **"non-skip person"** (everyone else). This legislative fix fundamentally reshaped high-net-worth estate planning, forcing a strategic approach to multigenerational wealth transfers. ==== The Law on the Books: The Internal Revenue Code ==== The official definition of a non-skip person is found not by looking for the term itself, but by understanding its opposite as defined in the [[internal_revenue_code]] (IRC). The key statute is **26 U.S.C. § 2613, "Skip person and non-skip person defined."** The code first defines a "skip person": > (a) In general.— For purposes of this chapter, the term “skip person” means— > (1) a natural person assigned to a generation which is 2 or more generations below the generation assignment of the transferor... The code then immediately defines a "non-skip person" with beautiful legislative simplicity: > (b) Non-skip person.— For purposes of this chapter, the term “non-skip person” means any person who is not a skip person. **In Plain English:** The law says, "First, figure out who is a skip person. Anyone who doesn't fit that definition is automatically a non-skip person." This means your primary task is always to identify the "skip persons" in your family tree relative to you (the transferor). * **Your children?** One generation below you. **Non-skip persons.** * **Your spouse?** Same generation. **Non-skip person.** * **Your siblings?** Same generation. **Non-skip persons.** * **Your grandchildren?** Two generations below you. **Skip persons.** * **Your grandnieces/nephews?** Two generations below your siblings (and thus you). **Skip persons.** ==== Identifying Non-Skip Persons: A Comparative Table ==== Because the GSTT is a federal tax, the rules are uniform across the United States. However, the status of a beneficiary depends entirely on their relationship to the transferor. This table clarifies common scenarios. ^ **Beneficiary / Entity** ^ **Is it a Non-Skip Person?** ^ **Why? (Based on Federal Tax Law)** ^ **Simple Example** ^ | Your Spouse | **Yes** | Your spouse is assigned to the same generation as you, the transferor. | You leave your entire estate to your surviving spouse in your will. This is a transfer to a non-skip person. | | Your Child | **Yes** | Your child is assigned to the first generation below you, not two or more. | You gift your daughter $100,000 for a down payment on a house. She is a non-skip person. | | Your Grandchild | **No** (It's a Skip Person) | Your grandchild is assigned to the second generation below you. | You gift your grandson $100,000 for college. He is a skip person, and the gift could have GSTT implications. | | A Charity (501(c)(3)) | **Yes** | Under IRC regulations, charitable organizations are always treated as being in the same generation as the transferor. | You name the American Red Cross as a beneficiary in your trust. The charity is a non-skip person. | | A Trust for Your Children Only | **Yes** | As long as all current and future beneficiaries of the trust are non-skip persons, the trust itself is a non-skip person. | You create a trust where the income and principal can only be distributed to your children. This is a non-skip trust. | | A Trust for Grandchildren | **No** (It's a Skip Person) | If all the beneficiaries of a trust are skip persons (e.g., only grandchildren), the trust itself is classified as a skip person. | You create a trust that holds assets exclusively for the benefit of your grandchildren. This is a skip trust. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== To truly master this concept, you have to understand the pieces that the [[internal_revenue_service]] uses to classify your loved ones. The entire system is built on defining what is "skipped" first. ==== The Anatomy of a Skip vs. Non-Skip Person ==== === The Foundation: Defining a "Skip Person" === A "skip person" is the target of the [[generation-skipping_transfer_tax]]. There are two primary ways a person can be classified as one: * **The Lineal Descendant Rule:** This is the most common test. A "lineal descendant" is someone in your direct bloodline (child, grandchild, great-grandchild). A lineal descendant is a **skip person** if they are **two or more generations** younger than you. * **Example:** You (Generation 0) give a gift to your Child (Generation -1). The child is a **non-skip person**. You give a gift to your Grandchild (Generation -2). The grandchild is a **skip person**. * **The Age-Gap Rule (for Non-Lineal Descendants):** What about people not in your direct bloodline, like a friend, a cousin's child, or a partner's nephew? The law uses a simple age test. A non-lineal descendant is a **skip person** if they are more than **37.5 years younger** than you. * **Example:** You are 70 years old. You make a gift to your 40-year-old niece. The age gap is 30 years, which is not more than 37.5. Therefore, your niece is a **non-skip person**. If you made the same gift to a 30-year-old family friend, the age gap is 40 years. That friend is a **skip person**. === The Definition by Negation: Who is a "Non-Skip Person"? === As we saw in the statute, a **non-skip person** is simply anyone who fails the tests above. They are the "safe" recipients who do not, by themselves, trigger the GSTT. The most common examples include: * **Your spouse.** * **Your ex-spouse.** * **Your children.** * **Your siblings.** * **Your nieces and nephews** (as long as they aren't more than 37.5 years younger). * **Friends or other relatives** (as long as they aren't more than 37.5 years younger). * **Trusts** where every single potential beneficiary is a non-skip person. * **Charitable organizations.** === The Crucial Exception: The Predeceased Parent Rule === This is one of the most important and compassionate rules in the GSTT framework. It addresses a tragic but common situation: What happens if your child dies before you do, and you want to leave money directly to their children (your grandchildren)? Normally, a grandchild is a skip person. However, under the **Predeceased Parent Rule** (IRC § 2651(e)), if a child is deceased at the time of the transfer, that child's descendants are "moved up" one generation for GSTT purposes. * **How it Works:** Let's say your son, John, passes away. John has a daughter, Sarah (your granddaughter). You decide to leave $1 million to Sarah in your will. * **Without the Rule:** Sarah is your grandchild, a skip person. The $1 million transfer would be a "direct skip" and potentially subject to GSTT. * **With the Rule:** Because Sarah's parent (John) is deceased, the law treats Sarah as if she is your child for GSTT purposes. She is "moved up" to her father's generation. Therefore, Sarah becomes a **non-skip person** relative to you, and the $1 million transfer is no longer subject to the GSTT. This rule is a powerful planning tool and provides crucial relief to families dealing with loss. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a GSTT Scenario ==== * **The Transferor:** This is you—the person making the gift during your lifetime or leaving a bequest in your will or trust. Your generation is the starting point for all calculations. * **The Beneficiary:** The person or entity receiving the asset. Their generational assignment or age determines whether they are a skip or **non-skip person**. * **The Trustee:** If the transfer is made to a trust, the trustee is the individual or institution responsible for managing the trust assets according to the trust document. They are responsible for making distributions and filing tax returns. * **The [[internal_revenue_service]] (IRS):** The federal agency that administers and collects the gift tax, estate tax, and the GSTT. * **The Estate Planning Attorney:** The legal professional who helps you navigate these complex rules, structure your estate plan to minimize taxes, and ensure your wishes are carried out. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== Thinking about this in abstract terms is difficult. The real value comes from applying these concepts to your own [[estate_planning]]. Because a "non-skip person" is the default, tax-favored recipient, the goal is not to "deal with" them, but to use their status strategically. ==== Step-by-Step: How to Use Non-Skip Person Status in Your Estate Plan ==== === Step 1: Map Your Family Tree and Identify Generations === Start with a simple diagram. Put yourself (and your spouse) at the top (Generation 0). Then list your children below (Generation -1), your grandchildren below them (Generation -2), and so on. Also list other important relatives like siblings, nieces, and nephews, noting their birth dates. This visual map is the foundation of your entire GSTT strategy. === Step 2: Classify Each Potential Beneficiary === Go through your map person by person and label them as either "Skip Person" or "**Non-Skip Person**" relative to you. - **Children:** Non-Skip - **Spouse:** Non-Skip - **Grandchildren:** Skip (unless the Predeceased Parent Rule applies) - **Niece (25 years younger):** Non-Skip - **Family Friend (40 years younger):** Skip === Step 3: Structure Gifts and Trusts to Maximize Non-Skip Transfers === Your primary goal is to pass wealth to the next generation (your children, who are **non-skip persons**) in the most efficient way possible. This can include: - **Direct Gifts:** Making gifts to your children during your lifetime using the annual [[gift_tax]] exclusion. - **Trusts for Children:** Creating trusts that name only your spouse and children as beneficiaries. These are "non-skip trusts" and are not subject to GSTT. === Step 4: Strategically Allocate Your GST Exemption for Skip Persons === Every U.S. citizen has a lifetime GST Exemption (which is a very large amount, but it changes with legislation). This exemption is like a "coupon" you can use to make transfers to **skip persons** tax-free. You do **not** need to use this valuable exemption on transfers to **non-skip persons**. By clearly separating your beneficiaries, you can reserve your entire GST Exemption for those transfers that actually need it—like funding a trust for your grandchildren. This is one of the most critical high-level strategies in estate planning. === Step 5: Review and Update Your Plan Regularly === Life changes. A child may pass away (triggering the Predeceased Parent Rule), new grandchildren may be born, and tax laws can change dramatically. Reviewing your estate plan with an attorney every 3-5 years ensures your beneficiary classifications remain accurate and your strategy remains effective. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== When dealing with large transfers of wealth, the [[internal_revenue_service]] requires documentation. The status of your beneficiaries as skip or non-skip persons directly impacts what you file. * **[[form_709_united_states_gift_tax_return]]**: This is the form you file when you make a gift that exceeds the annual exclusion amount. It has specific sections where you must report transfers to skip persons and allocate your GST Exemption. Gifts to **non-skip persons** are much simpler to report. * **[[form_706_united_states_estate_tax_return]]**: This form is filed by the executor of an estate after someone dies. Like Form 709, it contains detailed schedules (Schedule R) to calculate any GSTT owed on bequests to skip persons. Bequests to **non-skip persons** bypass this complex calculation. * **The Trust Document:** When creating a trust, the language used to define the beneficiaries is paramount. An [[estate_planning]] attorney will carefully draft this document to ensure beneficiaries are clearly identifiable and to structure distributions in a way that minimizes potential GSTT liability. ===== Part 4: Illustrative Scenarios and Rulings ===== Real-world examples make these abstract tax rules click. Here are a few common scenarios that highlight the difference between a non-skip and skip person. ==== Scenario 1: The Simple Bequest to a Child (A Classic Non-Skip) ==== * **The Backstory:** Maria passes away and her will leaves her entire $5 million estate to her only son, David. * **The Legal Question:** Is this transfer subject to the GSTT? * **The Analysis:** David is Maria's child, placing him in the first generation below her. This makes him a **non-skip person** by definition. * **Impact on an Ordinary Person:** Maria's estate will be subject to the regular [[estate_tax]] (if it exceeds the exemption amount), but it will **not** be subject to the separate, additional 40% GSTT. The transfer is straightforward from a GSTT perspective. ==== Scenario 2: The Direct Gift to a Grandchild (A Classic Skip) ==== * **The Backstory:** Frank is 75 and wants to help his 22-year-old grandson, Tom, buy a business. Frank writes him a check for $200,000. Frank's daughter (Tom's mother) is still alive and well. * **The Legal Question:** Is this transfer subject to the GSTT? * **The Analysis:** Tom is Frank's grandchild, two generations below him. Tom's mother is alive, so the Predeceased Parent Rule does not apply. Tom is a **skip person**. The $200,000 gift is a "direct skip." * **Impact on an Ordinary Person:** Frank must file a [[form_709_united_states_gift_tax_return]]. To avoid paying GSTT immediately, he will need to allocate $200,000 of his lifetime GST Exemption to this gift. This uses up a portion of his valuable exemption that could have been used for other transfers. ==== Scenario 3: The Predeceased Parent Rule in Action ==== * **The Backstory:** Susan has two children, a son and a daughter. Tragically, her daughter dies in a car accident, leaving behind a 15-year-old child, Chloe (Susan's granddaughter). In her will, Susan leaves half her estate to her son and half to Chloe. * **The Legal Question:** Is the transfer to Chloe subject to the GSTT? * **The Analysis:** Normally, a grandchild is a skip person. However, because Chloe's mother (Susan's daughter) is deceased, the Predeceased Parent Rule is triggered. For GSTT purposes only, Chloe is "moved up" a generation. * **Impact on an Ordinary Person:** Chloe is legally considered a **non-skip person** for this transfer. Susan's estate does not have to pay any GSTT on the bequest to Chloe and does not need to use any of her lifetime GST Exemption. This rule saves the family a potentially massive tax bill. ===== Part 5: The Future of the Non-Skip Person Concept ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: The "Sunset" of High Exemptions ==== The most significant issue affecting GSTT planning today is the uncertainty of the law itself. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 dramatically increased the lifetime exemptions for the estate, gift, and generation-skipping taxes. For 2024, the exemption is $13.61 million per person. However, this is not permanent. This provision is scheduled to **"sunset" on January 1, 2026**. If Congress does not act, the exemption amount will revert to its pre-2017 level, adjusted for inflation, which is estimated to be around $7 million. This has a direct impact on planning: * **For High-Net-Worth Individuals:** There is a major incentive to make large gifts to "skip persons" (like grandchildren in a trust) now, using the current high exemption before it disappears. * **For Everyone:** It highlights the importance of flexible estate plans. The definition of a **non-skip person** won't change, but the financial consequences of making a transfer to a skip person will become much more severe for a larger number of families if the exemption is cut in half. ==== On the Horizon: How Society is Changing the Law ==== The legal definitions of family and lineage, written decades ago, are being tested by modern society. * **Assisted Reproduction & Surrogacy:** The law is often slow to catch up with science. Questions can arise about the legal and generational status of children born through surrogacy or with donated genetic material, which can complicate GSTT analysis. * **Blended Families:** The increasing prevalence of blended families adds layers of complexity. Step-children and step-grandchildren have specific rules under the tax code that require careful navigation to determine their generational assignment. * **Legislative Risk:** The [[estate_tax]] and GSTT are perennially political topics. Future legislation could alter exemption amounts, tax rates, or even the fundamental rules for defining generations. This underscores the need for estate plans that are not set in stone but are reviewed regularly with a qualified professional. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[beneficiary]]**: The person, trust, or entity designated to receive assets or benefits from a will, trust, or insurance policy. * **[[direct_skip]]**: A transfer made directly to a skip person that is subject to gift or estate tax. * **[[estate_planning]]**: The process of arranging for the management and disposal of a person's estate during their life and after their death. * **[[estate_tax]]**: A federal tax levied on the transfer of a person's assets after their death. * **[[generation-skipping_transfer_tax]] (GSTT)**: A federal tax imposed on transfers of wealth to beneficiaries two or more generations younger than the transferor. * **[[gift_tax]]**: A federal tax on the transfer of money or property to another person while getting nothing (or less than full value) in return. * **[[gst_exemption]]**: A lifetime exemption amount that each individual can use to shield transfers to skip persons from the GSTT. * **[[internal_revenue_code]] (IRC)**: The body of federal statutory tax law in the United States. * **[[lineal_descendant]]**: A person in the direct line of descent, such as a child or grandchild. * **[[predeceased_parent_rule]]**: An exception that moves a grandchild up a generation for GSTT purposes if their parent (the transferor's child) is deceased. * **[[skip_person]]**: A beneficiary who is two or more generations younger than the transferor, or more than 37.5 years younger if unrelated. * **[[taxable_distribution]]**: A distribution of income or principal from a trust to a skip person. * **[[taxable_termination]]**: The termination of a non-skip person's interest in a trust, resulting in skip persons becoming the sole beneficiaries. * **[[transferor]]**: The person who makes a gift or creates a trust. * **[[trust]]**: A legal arrangement where a trustee holds assets for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries. ===== See Also ===== * [[generation-skipping_transfer_tax]] * [[skip_person]] * [[estate_tax]] * [[gift_tax]] * [[trust_law]] * [[estate_planning]] * [[internal_revenue_code]]