If the carryover basis rules that accompany estate tax repeal in 2010 become law, consideration to how to handle planning for a home will take on additional importance and complexity. When an executor considers which assets should receive an allocation of the $1.3 million general, and the $3 million spousal, basis adjustments following estate tax repeal in 2010 (if these rules ever come into effect) consideration should be given to maximizing the use of the home sale exclusion available to estates. This can increase the maximum capital gains that can be avoided under the post-2009 laws to $4,550,000 ($1.3 million general basis step up + $3 million spousal basis step up + $250,000 home sale exclusion) if a sale takes place after the death of the first spouse. Most practitioners, however, believe it unlikely that carryover basis will ever in fact become law.
A QRT is a trust that is a grantor trust, which is treated as owned by the client. The income earned by a grantor trust is taxable to the grantor (i.e., the person who created the trust) during his lifetime. The common QRT is the popular revocable living trust.