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PERSONAL RESIDENCE TRUSTS
A
Personal Residence Trust lets you continue to live in your home but
transfer it to your children now so you will save estate taxes when you
die. When
you set up a Personal Residence Trust, you transfer your home or
vacation home to an Irrevocable Trust. For a specified period of time
(often 10 to 15 years), you retain the right to use and live in the
residence. After that time, the residence transfers to your
Beneficiaries (usually your children). In
effect, you are giving your home to your children today. But because
your children will not receive it until sometime in the future, the
value of this gift is discounted (reduced). This uses less of your
federal gift and estate tax exemption than if you had kept the home (and
any future appreciation) in your estate. If
you die before the term of the Trust is over, there is no penalty - your
home will just be included in your taxable estate, which is what would
happen anyway without the Trust. If you live longer than the duration of
the Trust and want to keep living there, you will have to pay rent (at
fair market value).
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