I am working on a complex trust with two beneficiaries. On the form 1041 schedule B line 9, the income required to be distributed currently (and the amount the beneficiaries actually received) is $6588. This is greater than the the line 7 distributable net income of $2386. The income distribution deduction is the lessor of the two, and this is what flows through to the K-1s. My question is, shouldn't the actual amount that was distributed be reflected on the K-1s? Did I miss something?
What kind of deductions are there? Do they reduce taxable income but not Accounting income? Such as state tax paid on corpus?
There were minimal capital gains and interest that the account in the trust earned. $2 interest, $5 dividends and $65 capital gains. The only other income to the trust was the state of CT refund of $3129. Only expense was $750 accounting fee. Would you count the state refund as income? There was no deduction for state income tax the year before...
What year was the CT refund for? Was there a state tax deduction on the 1041 for that year?
How do expect the beneficiaries to be taxed on $6K income when there is only 2.5K income to tax (if that is even computed correctly)?
I don't really. I just want to understand the tax law. The $6500 is distributable corpus. The taxable income would be interest+dividends+capital gains and maybe (maybe not) the CT refund which is the $2.5K..
The CT refund was for the taxes withheld on a 1099R that was paid into the trust in 2024. There was no tax liability, and no deduction was taken for the tax. I understand that a refund is only taxable to the extent you took a deduction for the taxes paid, but I wondered if in this case it would be payment of the balance of the 1099.
There were $65 capital gains and these are distributed to the beneficiaries.
" There was no tax liability, and no deduction was taken for the tax. I understand that a refund is only taxable to the extent you took a deduction for the taxes paid"
Correct. So why is it in 2025 taxable income?
"I wondered if in this case it would be payment of the balance of the 1099."
I don't know what that means.
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