A qualified personal residence trust (QPRT) is an irrevocable grantor trust where the Trustor (or Grantor) gifts a personal residence to the trust, reserving the right to use the personal residence for a term of years. While the transfer of the residence to the trust incurs gift tax (which can be offset by the Trustor's gift tax exemption), the gift is discounted from fair market value of the residence by the Trustor maintaining an interest in occupying the property for a specified term of years.
At the end of this specified term of years the property passes to the beneficiaries of the trust (typically the Trustor's children or grandchildren), who may rent back the property to the Trustor, allowing the Trustor to further lower the value of his taxable estate.
The benefits of the QPRT are that it "freezes" the value of the gifted property for estate tax purposes. Therefore if a Trustor expects to survive 20 years and expects the value of his personal residence to double during that period, a QPRT will allow him to count only the current value of the personal residence (at the time of QPRT formation) in his taxable estate, even if his property appreciates sharply over time.
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