Tax Lawyers Press IRS to Clarify Trust Tax Trap in 2025 Law as JCT Footnote Signals Double Taxation
Updated
Updated · bimcmedia.com · Jun 4
Tax Lawyers Press IRS to Clarify Trust Tax Trap in 2025 Law as JCT Footnote Signals Double Taxation
2 articles · Updated · bimcmedia.com · Jun 4
Summary
IRS guidance is being sought after tax lawyers concluded a Joint Committee on Taxation document for the July 4, 2025 law could subject trusts and estates to tax twice on the same income.
JCS-1-25 appears to apply high-earner deduction limits to trusts and estates, meaning some income could be taxed first at the trust level and again when distributed to beneficiaries.
That risk matters because trusts reach the top federal income-tax bracket at far lower income levels than individuals, prompting wealth advisers to rerun estate-plan projections and consider restructurings before year-end.
The law still delivers broad tax cuts — including a $31,500 standard deduction for married couples from 2025 — but lawyers say the trust wrinkle was not widely understood when Congress passed it 51-50 in the Senate and 218-214 in the House.
Without Treasury or IRS clarification by fall, attorneys expect a wave of trust restructurings before Dec. 31, while any legislative technical fix would likely move slowly.
With a footnote threatening double taxation, how should families and charities urgently adjust their 2026 financial plans?
Was the new double tax on family trusts a legislative mistake or an intentional, unannounced policy shift?
Urgent Tax Alert: JCT Bluebook’s 2026 Interpretation of OBBBA Risks Double Taxation for Trusts and Estates
Overview
On June 4, 2026, the JCT Bluebook was released, unveiling a new interpretation of the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act' (OBBBA) that has caused widespread alarm among tax professionals and legal experts. This interpretation contradicts long-standing trust taxation principles by suggesting that certain trust distributions, which were traditionally non-taxable returns of principal, could now be treated as taxable income. As a result, the same funds could be taxed twice—first at the trust level and again when distributed to beneficiaries—posing a significant threat of double taxation for trusts and their beneficiaries.