John makes a $12M gift of assets into a SLAT for the lifetime benefit of his wife Jane. Jane can withdraw income and has some ability to withdraw principal, if necessary. She can also manage or sell assets inside her trust. When Jane dies, the assets will pass to their children. John uses up his lifetime exemption, even though as a married couple he might indirectly benefit from distributions of income or principal Jane may receive from the Trust.
Jane sets up a SLAT using her $12M lifetime gift exemption for the lifetime benefit of John. When John dies, however, the trust assets will pass to their grandchildren. Jane might indirectly benefit from the income and principal John can access. Alternatively, Jane could have the same beneficiaries but different withdrawal rights for John and/or use other different powers in the trust (this is just one example).
Advantages:
- Indirect benefit of the income and potential access to trust assets, if needed
- Uses gift and GST (Generation Skipping Transfer) exemption now, before the exclusion decreases in 2026
(or earlier if Congress acts)
- Future appreciation of trust assets avoids estate tax
Disadvantages:
- Divorce or death ends the indirect access to assets or income for the spouse who made the gift
- Careful legal drafting and maintenance is necessary to ensure trusts are not considered to be “reciprocal”
- If assets are withdrawn from the trust, this strategy can be inefficient and waste the estate tax exemption
- If the value of assets declines significantly, it results in an inefficient estate tax transfer
- Most SLATs are set up to be grantor trusts, meaning the spouse making the contribution to the trust will pay
the income tax on all the trust earnings.
This condensed example of SLAT mechanics merely touches on the scope of the specific provisions required to avoid the Reciprocal Trust Doctrine and other aspects. Should you be interested in exploring the SLAT further, we recommend engaging an estate planning attorney with experience with these trusts and collaborating as a team to ensure the best overall tax efficiency of this irrevocable gift. Your advisors at Aldrich Wealth, in conjunction with your estate planning attorney, can evaluate this opportunity and help you determine if it will achieve your wealth transfer goals.