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. ====== Non-Skip Person: The Ultimate Guide to GST Tax and Estate Planning ====== **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 you're running a family relay race, and the baton is your family's wealth. As the runner (let's call you the "Grantor"), your goal is to pass this baton to the next generation. The most logical person to pass it to is the very next runner in line—your child. In the world of [[estate_planning]], your child is the perfect example of a **non-skip person**. They are in the generation immediately following yours, the expected next recipient. The transfer is simple, direct, and doesn't raise any special alarms. Now, imagine you decide to throw the baton *over* your child's head, directly to your grandchild, who is waiting two spots down the track. This is a "generation skip." While it might seem efficient, the [[internal_revenue_service|IRS]] sees this as a way for wealthy families to avoid paying taxes on the wealth as it passes through the child's generation. To prevent this, they created a special, steep tax called the [[generation_skipping_transfer_tax|Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax (GSTT)]]. Understanding who is a **non-skip person** is the absolute key to understanding—and legally avoiding—this tax. They are the "safe" recipients who don't trigger the GSTT alarm bells. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **The Core Principle:** A **non-skip person** is any beneficiary of a gift, trust, or inheritance who is **not** a [[skip_person]]. This typically includes your spouse, children, and anyone else assigned to the generation immediately below yours. * **The Financial Impact:** Transferring assets to a **non-skip person** does **not** trigger the [[generation_skipping_transfer_tax]], a federal tax with a rate as high as 40%, which is applied on top of any applicable [[estate_tax]] or [[gift_tax]]. * **The Planning Imperative:** Correctly identifying every beneficiary as either a skip or **non-skip person** is a non-negotiable first step in sophisticated [[estate_planning]] to ensure your wealth is preserved and passed on according to your wishes, without disastrous tax consequences. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of the Non-Skip Person Concept ===== ==== The Story of the Non-Skip Person: A Historical Journey ==== The term "non-skip person" doesn't exist in a vacuum. It was born out of a multi-decade chess match between wealthy American families and the U.S. Congress over [[inheritance]] taxes. For much of the 20th century, families with significant wealth used a clever strategy to protect their fortunes across generations. A patriarch or matriarch would place their assets into a long-term [[trusts|trust]]. The trust would be structured to provide income to their children for their entire lives, but the children would never legally "own" the principal. Upon the child's death, the trust assets would pass directly to the grandchildren. This was ingenious because the [[estate_tax]] was only triggered when assets were transferred from one person's estate to another. Since the child never owned the trust principal, there was no estate tax when they died. The family's wealth effectively "skipped" an entire generation of taxation, allowing fortunes to remain intact for a century or more. Congress saw this as a massive loophole. In 1976, it made its first attempt at closing it by creating the Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax. This initial version was notoriously complex and difficult to administer. Recognizing its flaws, Congress went back to the drawing board and, as part of the **Tax Reform Act of 1986**, repealed the old tax and enacted the GSTT system we know today. This new system was built on a simple, but powerful, idea: every generation should be subject to a wealth transfer tax. To enforce this, the law had to create a clear way to identify when a generation was being skipped. This led to the creation of two opposing legal definitions: the **"skip person"** (the far-away beneficiary, like a grandchild) and, by extension, the **"non-skip person"** (everyone else, most notably the child). The entire purpose of this legal distinction is to serve as the trigger for the GSTT. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== The legal authority for defining a non-skip person is found within the [[internal_revenue_code|Internal Revenue Code (IRC)]], the massive body of law governing federal taxes in the United States. The key section is **IRC § 2613**, which defines a "Skip Person." The law defines a non-skip person by what it is **not**. In essence, **IRC § 2613(b)** states that a **non-skip person is any person who is not a skip person**. To understand this, we must look at the two main types of "skip persons": * **Lineal Descendants:** A skip person is a lineal descendant (e.g., grandchild, great-grandchild) who is two or more generations below the generation of the transferor (the person making the gift). * **Non-Lineal/Unrelated Individuals:** For people not in a direct family line (like a friend or a grand-niece), a skip person is anyone who is more than 37.5 years younger than the transferor. Therefore, a **non-skip person** includes: * Your spouse. * Your children. * Your siblings. * Your nieces and nephews. * A friend or other unrelated person who is **not** more than 37.5 years younger than you. The law's language from [[internal_revenue_code|IRC § 2613(a)(1)]] is technical: > "a natural person assigned to a generation which is 2 or more generations below the generation assignment of the transferor." **Plain-Language Translation:** The tax code is built to spot when you are transferring wealth to someone who is roughly the age of your grandchild or younger. Anyone who is not in that category is considered a **non-skip person**. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Federal vs. State Considerations ==== The Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax, and therefore the definition of a non-skip person, is a **strictly federal concept**. However, its application is deeply intertwined with state-level estate and inheritance tax laws. A comprehensive estate plan must account for both. Here’s a comparison of how the federal GSTT framework interacts with the transfer tax systems in four representative states: ^ Federal vs. State Wealth Transfer Tax Landscape ^ | **Jurisdiction** | **State Estate Tax?** | **State Inheritance Tax?** | **Implication for "Non-Skip Person" Planning** | | Federal (IRS) | Yes, for estates over the federal exemption amount (e.g., $13.61 million in 2024). | No. | **This is the origin of the concept.** Your primary goal is to structure transfers to avoid the federal GSTT by utilizing the GSTT exemption or transferring to non-skip persons. | | New York | Yes, for estates over the NY exemption amount (much lower than federal). | No. | A transfer to a **non-skip person** (like a child) avoids the federal GSTT but could still be subject to NY estate tax upon that child's death. Planning must account for both tax hits at different generational levels. | | Pennsylvania | No. | **Yes.** PA has an inheritance tax with different rates based on the relationship of the heir. A child (a non-skip person) pays a low 4.5% rate, while a sibling pays 12%, and an unrelated friend pays 15%. | Here, the "non-skip person" status for federal purposes is separate from the state inheritance tax calculation. You could avoid the 40% GSTT but still owe a 15% state tax on a transfer to a non-skip friend. | | Florida & Texas | No. | No. | In these states, your planning is simplified. The main focus is squarely on the federal estate tax and the GSTT. Identifying **non-skip persons** is purely about managing your federal tax liability. | **What this means for you:** Your state of residence dramatically changes the complexity of your estate plan. Simply avoiding the GSTT by transferring assets to a **non-skip person** is only one piece of the puzzle. You must also consider how your state will tax those assets when they are eventually passed down from that non-skip person. ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== To truly master this concept, you must be able to break it down and analyze any family situation. The determination rests on four key pillars. ==== The Anatomy of a Non-Skip Person: Key Components Explained ==== === Element: The Transferor === The **Transferor** is the starting point for any analysis. This is the individual who is making the transfer of property. * In the case of a lifetime gift, the transferor is the donor. * In the case of a transfer from an estate after death, the transferor is the decedent (the person who died). * In the case of a [[trusts|trust]], the transferor is the grantor or settlor—the person who created and funded the trust. **Why it matters:** Every generational measurement is calculated **relative to the transferor's generation**. You cannot determine if someone is a non-skip person without first identifying the transferor. === Element: The Beneficiary === The **Beneficiary** is the individual or entity receiving the interest in the property. Your goal is to determine if this beneficiary is a non-skip person or a [[skip_person]]. This analysis must be performed for every single potential beneficiary in your will or trust. **Example:** * You create a trust for the benefit of your son for his life, and then upon his death, the remainder goes to your granddaughter. * **Your son is a beneficiary.** He is one generation below you, making him a **non-skip person**. * **Your granddaughter is also a beneficiary.** She is two generations below you, making her a [[skip_person]]. === Element: Generational Assignment === This is the most critical and rule-intensive element. The IRS has a precise method for assigning every person to a generation relative to the transferor. * **Family Members (Lineal Descendants):** This is the most straightforward. The law follows the direct family tree. * *Transferor's Generation:* The transferor and their spouse. * *First Generation Below (Non-Skip):* Children. * *Second Generation Below (Skip):* Grandchildren. * *Third Generation Below (Skip):* Great-grandchildren. * The spouses of these individuals are always assigned to the same generation as the family member they married. * **Non-Family Members (Collateral Relatives & Unrelated Individuals):** When there is no direct parent-child line, the assignment is based on age. * **Rule:** The transferor's generation includes anyone born within 12.5 years (either before or after) of the transferor's birth date. * The next generation (the "non-skip" generation) includes anyone born more than 12.5 years after the transferor, but not more than 37.5 years after. * A "skip" generation includes anyone born more than 37.5 years after the transferor. **Relatable Example:** You are 65. You want to leave money to your beloved nephew, who is 45, and your best friend's son, who is 25. - **Nephew (45):** He is your sibling's child, so he is assigned to the first generation below you. He is a **non-skip person**. - **Friend's Son (25):** He is unrelated to you. The age difference is 40 years (65 - 25). Since this is greater than 37.5 years, he is assigned to a "skip" generation. He is a [[skip_person]]. === Element: The "Predeceased Ancestor" Rule === This is a vital exception to the general rules, designed to address tragic circumstances in a fair way. **The Rule (IRC § 2651(e)):** If a beneficiary's parent (who must be a lineal descendant of the transferor) is deceased **at the time of the transfer**, that beneficiary "steps up" into their deceased parent's generation. **Simple Explanation:** Let's say you plan to leave money to your daughter, who is a non-skip person. Tragically, she passes away before you do. She leaves behind her own child—your grandson. Normally, your grandson would be a skip person. But under this rule, because his mother (your direct descendant) is no longer living, the law treats your grandson as if he were your son for GSTT purposes. He "moves up" a generation and becomes a **non-skip person**. **Impact:** This compassionate rule prevents a family from being unfairly penalized with a massive GSTT bill simply because of an untimely death. It allows the wealth to flow to the next living generation in the family line without triggering the tax. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a Non-Skip Person Analysis ==== * **The Grantor/Testator:** The individual creating the will or trust. Their intentions and relationships are the foundation of the entire plan. * **The Estate Planning Attorney:** The legal architect. This expert is responsible for drafting documents that correctly classify beneficiaries, structure trusts, and strategically use the [[gstt_exemption]] to minimize tax liability. * **The Trustee:** The manager of a trust. The trustee has a [[fiduciary_duty]] to follow the trust's instructions, which includes making distributions to the correct beneficiaries (both skip and non-skip) as specified. * **The CPA/Accountant:** The tax professional who prepares and files critical forms like [[irs_form_709|IRS Form 709 (Gift Tax Return)]] and [[irs_form_706|IRS Form 706 (Estate Tax Return)]]. These forms are where the GSTT exemption is formally allocated and any tax due is calculated. * **The Beneficiaries:** The recipients of the assets. Their relationship and age relative to the grantor determine their status as skip or non-skip persons. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== If you are beginning the estate planning process, thinking in terms of skip and non-skip persons from the outset can save your family millions of dollars. Here is a step-by-step guide. ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Face a Non-Skip Person Issue ==== === Step 1: Map Your Family and Beneficiaries === - **Action:** Create a detailed family tree. Don't stop at just your children and grandchildren. Include siblings, nieces, nephews, and any non-relatives you wish to include in your plan. - **Pro Tip:** For each person, list their full name, date of birth, and relationship to you. This data is the raw material for the entire analysis. === Step 2: Perform the Generational Assignment === - **Action:** Using the rules from Part 2, go through your map and assign a generation to every single person. * For direct descendants, it's easy: Children are Gen-1, Grandchildren are Gen-2, etc. * For everyone else, calculate the age difference between you and them. If it's more than 37.5 years, they are Gen-2 (or lower). Otherwise, they are Gen-1. - **Key Task:** Clearly label each person as either a **Non-Skip Person** or a [[skip_person]]. === Step 3: Analyze Your Desired Wealth Transfers === - **Action:** Think about how you want your assets to flow. Do you want everything to go to your children (non-skip persons)? Or do you want to set aside significant funds for your grandchildren (skip persons)? - **Consider:** Be specific. "I want to leave $100,000 to each grandchild" is a direct skip. "I want to create a trust for my son, and when he dies it goes to his kids" involves both a non-skip and a skip person. === Step 4: Understand the GSTT Exemption === - **Action:** The government provides a lifetime [[gstt_exemption]] (which is the same as the federal estate tax exemption, $13.61 million per person in 2024). This is the amount of money you can transfer to skip persons without paying the GSTT. - **Strategic Question:** Is the total amount you plan to give to skip persons *less than* your available GSTT exemption? If yes, you may be able to make those transfers without tax by allocating your exemption. If it's more, you have a potential tax problem that requires expert planning. === Step 5: Consult with an Experienced Estate Planning Attorney === - **Action:** This is not a DIY project. Take your beneficiary map and your transfer goals to a qualified attorney. - **Discussion Points:** * "How can we best structure trusts to provide for both my children (non-skip) and grandchildren (skip)?" * "Should I be allocating my GSTT exemption on my gift tax returns now?" * "What happens if my child dies before me? How do we ensure the plan accounts for the Predeceased Ancestor Rule?" ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **[[will_(document)|Last Will and Testament]]:** This document dictates where your assets go upon your death. Clearly naming your beneficiaries is the first step in the classification process. However, for avoiding GSTT, a will is often insufficient; a trust is needed. * **[[trust_document|Trust Document]]:** This is the primary tool for sophisticated estate planning. A "dynasty trust" or "generation-skipping trust" is specifically designed to hold assets for multiple generations. The language in the trust must be precise about how and when distributions are made to non-skip and skip persons. * **[[irs_form_709|IRS Form 709 (United States Gift and Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax Return)]]:** You file this form if you make a large gift during your lifetime. It is used to report gifts made to skip persons and, crucially, to allocate your lifetime GSTT exemption to those gifts so they are not taxed later. ===== Part 4: Landmark Rulings That Shaped Today's Law ===== Unlike constitutional law, GSTT law isn't shaped by famous Supreme Court battles. Instead, its interpretation is refined through Internal Revenue Service **Private Letter Rulings (PLRs)** and **Tax Court** decisions that clarify how the complex rules apply to real-world family situations. ==== Case Study: Clarifying the Predeceased Ancestor Rule (PLR 200646002) ==== * **The Backstory:** A grandmother (the transferor) had a son who had previously passed away. The deceased son had three children of his own (the grandchildren). The grandmother wanted to create a trust for the benefit of these three grandchildren. * **The Legal Question:** Normally, transfers to grandchildren are transfers to [[skip_person|skip persons]] and would trigger the GSTT. The question was: Did the "Predeceased Ancestor Rule" apply here, moving the grandchildren up a generation and making them **non-skip persons**? * **The IRS Holding:** The IRS ruled **yes**. Because the grandchildren's parent (the grandmother's son) was deceased, the grandchildren were moved up to their father's generation for GSTT purposes. The transfers to the trust for their benefit were **not** considered generation-skipping transfers. * **Impact on You Today:** This ruling provides a strong precedent that gives planners confidence. It confirms that you can provide for your grandchildren directly without GSTT consequences if their parent in your family line has already passed away. ==== Case Study: Modifying Old Trusts (Commissioner v. Estate of Simplot) ==== * **The Backstory:** Many very old trusts were created before the 1986 GSTT law was enacted. These trusts are "grandfathered" in and are exempt from the GSTT. The Simplot family had such trusts. They went to court to modify the administrative terms of the trust. * **The Legal Question:** Can you make changes to a grandfathered trust without causing it to lose its valuable GSTT-exempt status? If a modification is too substantial, the IRS can argue it creates a "new" trust that is subject to the modern GSTT rules. This makes the distinction between skip and non-skip beneficiaries suddenly critical. * **The Court's Holding:** While the specifics are complex, the general principle affirmed in cases like this is that purely administrative changes are often permissible, but changes that substantially alter the timing or amount of beneficial interests can destroy the exemption. * **Impact on You Today:** If you are the beneficiary or trustee of an old family trust, **do not** attempt to modify it without expert legal and tax advice. A seemingly innocent change could inadvertently subject the entire trust to the 40% GSTT, making the "non-skip person" analysis essential for all future distributions. ===== Part 5: The Future of the Non-Skip Person Concept ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: The Ever-Changing Exemption Amount ==== The single biggest controversy surrounding the GSTT is the size of the exemption. The relevance of the **non-skip person** definition is directly tied to this number. * **High Exemption Era:** Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA), the GSTT exemption was raised to a historic high (over $13 million per person). For the vast majority of American families, this makes the GSTT irrelevant. If your entire estate is less than the exemption, you can leave it to anyone—skip or non-skip—without triggering the tax. * **The "Sunset" Provision:** The high exemption amount under the TCJA is scheduled to expire at the end of 2025. In 2026, unless Congress acts, it is set to revert to its pre-2017 level, which would be around $7 million (adjusted for inflation). * **The Debate:** This creates enormous uncertainty. High-net-worth individuals are currently using the large exemption to fund long-term trusts. Political debates rage about whether the exemption should be permanent, allowed to sunset, or lowered even further. A lower exemption would make the distinction between a **non-skip person** and a skip person critically important for millions more families. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **Changing Family Structures:** The traditional "lineal descendant" model is being challenged. How will the IRS apply generational assignment rules to children born via surrogacy, or in families with same-sex parents where one parent is not a biological ancestor? The law is still evolving, and future regulations or court cases will need to provide clarity. * **Digital Assets:** How do you value a portfolio of cryptocurrency or a collection of NFTs for GSTT purposes? The volatility and novelty of these assets create challenges for trustees and estate planners when making distributions and calculating potential tax liability. * **Increased Focus on Trusts:** As legislative uncertainty continues, more families are turning to trusts for flexibility. This puts even greater emphasis on the role of the trustee and the importance of drafting documents that clearly define how to handle distributions to both **non-skip person** and skip person beneficiaries under various potential tax regimes. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[beneficiary]]:** An individual or entity designated to receive assets or benefits from a will, trust, or insurance policy. * **[[direct_skip]]:** A transfer of assets made directly to a skip person, such as a grandparent giving cash to a grandchild. * **[[estate_tax]]:** A federal tax levied on the total value of a person's assets and property at the time of their death. * **[[generation_skipping_transfer_tax]]:** A federal tax imposed on wealth transfers to beneficiaries two or more generations younger than the donor. * **[[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. * **[[grantor]]:** The person who creates and funds a trust; also known as a settlor or trustor. * **[[gstt_exemption]]:** A lifetime credit that each individual can use to offset transfers that would otherwise be subject to the GSTT. * **[[internal_revenue_code]]:** The body of federal statutory tax law in the United States. * **[[lineal_descendant]]:** A person who is in the direct line of descent, such as a child, grandchild, or great-grandchild. * **[[skip_person]]:** A beneficiary who is two or more generations younger than the transferor, triggering potential GSTT liability. * **[[taxable_distribution]]:** A distribution of property or income from a trust to a skip person. * **[[taxable_termination]]:** The termination of a non-skip person's interest in a trust, resulting in the assets passing to a skip person. * **[[trustee]]:** The person or institution responsible for managing the assets held within a trust. * **[[trusts]]:** A legal arrangement where a trustee holds and manages assets for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries. ===== See Also ===== * [[estate_planning]] * [[generation_skipping_transfer_tax]] * [[skip_person]] * [[trusts]] * [[gift_tax]] * [[estate_tax]] * [[internal_revenue_service]]