International Trust and Estate Planning: Key Issues Under Current U.S. Tax Law, Trust Structures, Reporting
Valuation Concepts, Tax Filings, Selecting Trust Jurisdiction, Trust Protectors, and Other Key Issues

Course Details
- smart_display Format
On-Demand
- signal_cellular_alt Difficulty Level
Intermediate
- work Practice Area
Estate Planning
- event Date
Tuesday, July 2, 2024
- schedule Time
1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT
- timer Program Length
90 minutes
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This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.
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BARBRI is a NASBA CPE sponsor and this 110-minute webinar is accredited for 2.0 CPE credits.
This CLE/CPE webinar will provide estate planners an in-depth analysis of available estate planning techniques for families with citizenship, assets, or beneficiaries across multiple jurisdictions. The panel will discuss legal challenges, key issues under U.S. tax law, transfer tax planning, and methods in managing foreign business interests, investments and unreported income or accounts, and other complexities involved when a U.S. taxpayer has a foreign spouse or direct family member owning foreign or inbound-U.S. assets.
Faculty

Ms. Jacobson represents high net worth individuals and families in tax, estate planning and trust matters. Her practice is dedicated to assisting global families with some U.S. connection, including foreign families with U.S. beneficiaries and foreign individuals making U.S. investments. Ms. Jacobson devises creative strategies to facilitate tax-efficient wealth transfers among U.S. and foreign clients for their wealth worldwide. She has significant experience dealing with complex, international trust issues and routinely provides advice to U.S. beneficiaries and foreign fiduciaries on the related U.S. tax and compliance implications. Ms. Jacobson also assists foreign clients with respect to their inbound investments in U.S. real estate. She regularly implements foreign grantor trust structures, provides advice on foreign nongrantor trusts with U.S. beneficiaries, including those with significant undistributed net income (UNI) and passive foreign investment company (PFIC) issues, and assists with tax advantageous restructuring through trust domestication, migration and decanting. Ms. Jacobson has represented family offices and assisted clients with establishing private trust companies. She also advises clients with pre-residency planning before they relocate to the United States and U.S. clients with planning in advance of expatriation.

With more than 30 years of experience, Mr. Lipoff specializes in the delivery of domestic and international private client services to enable high-net-worth individuals and families to maximize their new or generational wealth. He provides strategic advice to his clients and their closely held businesses in the areas of income tax planning and compliance, estate planning and administration services, as well as family structure consulting. Through many years in practice, he synthesized the work of various related professionals, and their firms integrate several planning strategies into solutions that maximize value. Mr. Lipoff is a frequent lecturer and author of articles published through professional forums on topics including domestic and international - estate planning and fiduciary income taxation including constructive attribution rules for foreign trusts, Forms 3520 & 3520-A, Graegin Loans, business succession, generation-skipping transfers, Chapter 14 and carried interest estate planning for private investment fund principals, preferred freeze partnerships, and private placement life insurance.
Description
Many U.S. citizens and permanent residents have non-U.S. spouses or family members or property interests abroad; likewise, many non-U.S. citizens/non-U.S. residents have U.S. property interests or U.S. family members. Under current U.S. tax law, estate planning can create some specific complications for these families. Estate planning counsel and tax advisers must be prepared to assist these clients in navigating the complicated tax and wealth planning rules associated with cross-border interests.
U.S. tax rules for estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer taxes may offer gift planning opportunities. In contrast, some rules for the income taxation of corporations and partnerships may impact how investments are structured. Also, holding business and investment assets through foreign corporations may subject U.S. shareholders to additional tax liability.
Estate planning for international families must consider which countries' laws govern the disposition of assets, as well as the income, estate, and gift tax treatment of specific transactions, including the interaction of multiple tax regimes. In addition, estate planners must understand essential valuation concepts, types of tax filings and requirements, and utilizing trusts as well as selecting trust jurisdiction and trust protectors.
Listen as our experienced panel guides attendees on how to plan the estates of clients with interests in foreign business entities, real estate, and financial accounts. The panel will cover the legal and tax considerations when planning for the disposition of each type of asset and the implications of U.S. tax law.
Outline
- Implications of current U.S. tax law on international estate planning
- Estate planning tax and legal issues for business interests in the international context
- Wealth planning: gifts, bequests, and trusts for U.S. clients with assets abroad/non-U.S. clients with U.S. assets
Benefits
The panel will review these and other key issues:
- Potential legal and tax pitfalls when planning for the disposition of a U.S. client's financial and real property interests abroad and a non-U.S. client's interests in the U.S.
- The impact of situs rules on gifts and bequests by non-U.S. citizens/non-U.S. residents, including the disposition of interests in real property, business entities, and debt instruments, and issues involved in converting assets to "intangible" interests
- U.S. tax reporting and compliance issues relating to the disposition of interests in business entities, real property, and financial accounts in the international context
- Benefits and pitfalls of utilizing certain trusts
NASBA Details
Learning Objectives
After completing this course, you will be able to:
- Identify potential foreign asset reporting obligations of trusts and estates
- Discern between willful and non-willful FBAR violations
- Recognize key property and contract law items to consider before applying the transfer tax
- Ascertain when Form 3520 must be filed
- Recognize key valuation concepts to decrease amounts subject to gift, estate, and generation-skipping transfer tax
- Field of Study: Taxes
- Level of Knowledge: Intermediate
- Advance Preparation: None
- Teaching Method: Seminar/Lecture
- Delivery Method: Group-Internet (via computer)
- Attendance Monitoring Method: Attendance is monitored electronically via a participant's PIN and through a series of attendance verification prompts displayed throughout the program
- Prerequisite: Three years+ business or public firm experience preparing complex tax forms and schedules, supervising other preparers or accountants. Specific knowledge and understanding of estate, gift and trust taxation including various trusts types, the unified credit, and portability.

Strafford Publications, Inc. is registered with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) as a sponsor of continuing professional education on the National Registry of CPE Sponsors. State boards of Accountancy have final authority on the acceptance of individual courses for CPE Credits. Complaints regarding registered sponsons may be submitted to NASBA through its website: www.nasbaregistry.org.
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