Are You Aware That IRS Penalties Can Be Reduced?

Are You Aware That IRS Penalties Can Be Reduced?

Are You Aware That IRS Penalties Can Be Reduced?

Each year the IRS assesses millions of penalties against taxpayers. Most taxpayers are unaware that post-assessment the IRS also abates many of those same penalties. During fiscal year 2013 the IRS assessed 37 million penalties against taxpayers. The IRS later abated about 5 million of those penalties. Most of those abatements occurred because taxpayers or their representatives contested the penalties. It is important for those subject to IRS penalties to know their rights to dispute a penalty assessed by the IRS.

There are over 100 potential penalties that might be asserted against a taxpayer.

The majority of the penalties however: fall into two categories: collection penalties and accuracy related penalties.

The most common collection related penalties are:

  • Late filing up to 25% of the unpaid taxes of the return
  • Late payment up to 25% of the unpaid taxes
  • Late federal tax deposits up to 15% of late deposits

The most common accuracy with related penalties are:

  • Negligence penalty up to 20% of the understated taxes
  • Substantial understatement penalty up to 20% of the understated taxes

For taxpayer subject to IRS penalties the IRS Penalty handbook provides a listing of the IRS’s favorite reasons for reducing penalties.

In considering non-assertion or abatement of penalties the IRS applies a standard of “Reasonable Cause”.

Most people are unaware that the IRS will consider the following as reasons it might reduce a penalty:

  • Death, Serious Illness, or Unavoidable Absence
  • Fire, Casualty, Natural Disaster, or Other Disturbance
  • Unable to Obtain Records
  • Mistake was Made
  • Ignorance of the Law
  • Forgetfulness
  • Statutory Exceptions or Waivers
  • Undue Hardship
  • Written Advice From IRS
  • Oral Advice From IRS
  • Advice from a Tax Advisor
  • Official Disaster Area
  • IRS Error

The taxpayers who have not had a previous delinquency the IRS generally may apply a First Time Abatement Rule upon request by the taxpayer. If taxpayer has not previously been required to file a return or if no prior penalties (except the Estimated Tax Penalty) have been assessed on the same against the same taxpayer. This First-Time Abate (FTA) is an Administrative Waiver. A taxpayer seeking an FTA must request a penalty reduction in writing.

IRS employees reviewing penalties use a computer program known as reasonable cause assistant. In other words the IRS uses artificial intelligence to determine whether to reduce a penalty. Those who specifically reference to a section of the penalty handbook are much more likely to have IRS penalties reduced.

Not all IRS employees are adequately trained in the reasons for reasonable cause.

Those taxpayers referencing the penalty handbook have a much greater chance of success than those who merely submit a statement of facts to support their request for reduced penalties. In other words those who avoid the need for an IRS employee to research reasons for penalty reduction by citing directly to the IRS manual will be much more successful than those who rely upon the IRS to properly research that manual.

To qualify for penalty abatement you must convince the IRS that you should not be held liable for this additional money. Some examples of such reasons that will give you a good chance of receiving penalty abatement include: a serious sickness; a family problem, such as a divorce; the destruction of important tax records; hiring a tax professional who gave you harmful advice; a natural disaster; or long term unemployment. If you have faced any of these issues, you have a higher chance of getting your IRS penalties removed.

What about Gifts from Foreigners in your Tax Returns?

What about Gifts from Foreigners in your Tax Returns?

What about Gifts from Foreigners in your Tax Returns?

December is a time when we think of gifts, both giving and receiving them. If you are a U.S. person who received foreign gifts of money or other property, you may need to report these gifts on Form 3520, Annual Return to Report Transactions with Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts. Form 3520 is an information return, not a tax return, because foreign gifts are not subject to income tax. However, there are significant penalties for failure to file Form 3520 when it is required.

General Rule: Foreign Gifts

In general, a foreign gift is money or other property received by a U.S. person from a foreign person that the recipient treats as a gift or bequest and excludes from gross income. A “foreign person” is a non-resident alien individual or foreign corporation, partnership or estate.

The IRS may re-characterize purported gifts from foreign partnerships or foreign corporations as items of income that must be included in gross income. Additionally, gifts from foreign trusts are subject to different rules than gifts other foreign persons.

A gift to a U.S. person does not include amounts paid for qualified tuition or medical payments made on behalf of the U.S. person.

Reporting Requirements

You must file Form 3520, Annual Return to Report Transactions with Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, if, during the current tax year, you treat the receipt of money or other property above certain amounts as a foreign gift or bequest. Include on Form 3520:

  • Gifts or bequests valued at more than $100,000 from a non-resident alien individual or foreign estate (including foreign persons related to that non-resident alien individual or foreign estate);

or

  • Gifts valued at more than $13,258 (adjusted annually for inflation) from foreign corporations or foreign partnerships (including foreign persons related to the foreign corporations or foreign partnerships).

You must aggregate gifts received from related parties. For example, if you receive $60,000 from non-resident alien A and $50,000 from non-resident alien B, and you know or have reason to know they are related, you must report the gifts because the total is more than $100,000. Report them in Part IV of Form 3520. Treat gifts from foreign trusts as trust distributions you report in Part III of Form 3520.

File Form 3520 separately from your income tax return. The due date for filing Form 3520 is the same as the due date for filing your annual income tax return, including extensions. You file an annual Form 3520 for all reportable foreign gifts and bequests you receive during the taxable year. See the Instructions for Form 3520 for additional information. Under a new law effective June 17, 2008, gifts from individuals who ceased to be a U.S. citizens or green card holders (lawful permanent residents) on or after June 17, 2008 may be subject to special rules. Refer to the 2008 Instructions for Form 3520 for additional information.

Penalties for Failure to File Form 3520

You may be penalized if you do not file your Form 3520 on time or if it is incomplete or inaccurate. Generally, the penalty is 5% of the amount of the foreign gift for each month for which the failure to report continues (not to exceed a total of 25%).

Choosing a Better Business Structure

Choosing a Better Business Structure

Choosing a Better Business Structure

Of all the choices, you make when starting a business one of the most important is the type of legal organization you select for your company. This decision can affect how much you pay in taxes, the amount of paperwork your business is required to do, the personal liability you face, and your ability to borrow money.

Business formation is controlled by the law of the state where your business is organized.

This fact sheet provides a quick and most common forms of business entities.

The most common forms of businesses are:

1.Sole Proprietorship

2.Partnerships

3.Corporations

4.Subchapter S Corporation

5.Limited Liability Companies (LLC)

While state law controls the formation of your business, federal tax law controls how your business is taxed. Federal tax law recognizes an additional business form, the Subchapter S Corporation.

All businesses must file an annual return. The form you use depends on how your business is organized. Sole proprietorships and corporations file an income tax return. Partnerships and S Corporations file an information return. For an LLC with at least two members, except for some businesses that are automatically classified as a corporation, it can choose to be classified for tax purposes as either a corporation or a partnership. A business with a single member can choose to be classified as either a corporation or disregarded as an entity separate from its owner, that is, a “disregarded entity.” As a disregarded entity, the LLC will not file a separate return instead all the income or loss is reported by the single member/owner on its annual return.

The answer to the question “What structure makes the most sense?” depends on the individual circumstances of each business owner.

The type of business entity you choose will depend on:

  • Liability
  • Taxation
  • Record keeping

1. Solo Proprietorship

A sole proprietorship is the most common form of business organization. It’s easy to form and offers complete control to the owner.

It is any unincorporated business owned entirely by one individual.

In general, the owner is also personally liable for all financial obligations and debts of the business. (State law may also govern this area depending on the state.)

Sole proprietors can operate any kind of business. It must be a business, not an investment or hobby. It can be full-time or part-time work. This includes operating a:

  1. Shop or retail trade business
  2. Large company with employees
  3. Home based business
  4. One person consulting firm

Every sole proprietor is required to keep sufficient records to comply with federal tax requirements regarding business records.

Generally, sole proprietors file Schedule C or C-EZ, Profit or Loss from Business, with their Form 1040. Sole proprietor farmers file Schedule F, Profit or Loss from Farming. Your net business income or loss is combined with your other income and deductions and taxed at individual rates on your personal tax return.

Sole proprietors must also pay self-employment tax on the net income reported on Schedule C or Schedule F. You may also be able to deduct one-half of SE tax on your 1040. Use Schedule SE, Self-Employment Tax, to compute this tax.

Sole proprietors do not have taxes withheld from their business income so

you will generally need to make quarterly estimated tax payments if you expect to make a profit.

These estimated payments include both income tax and self-employment taxes for Social Security and Medicare.

2. Partnership

A partnership is the relationship existing between two or more persons who join to carry on a trade or business. Each person contributes money, property, labor or skill and expects to share in the profits and losses of the business.

A partnership does not pay any income tax at the partnership level. Partnerships file Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income,

to report income and expenses. This is an information return. The partnership passes the information to the individual partners on Schedule K-1, Partner’s Share of Income, Credits, and Deductions. Partnerships are often referred to as pass-through or flow-through entities, for this reason.

Each partner reports his share of the partnership net profit or loss on his personal Form 1040 tax returns. Partners must report their share of partnership income even if a distribution is not made.

Partners are not employees of the partnership and so taxes are not withheld from any distributions.

Like sole proprietors, partners generally need to make quarterly estimated tax payments if they expect to make a profit.

General partners must pay self-employment tax on their net earnings from self-employment assigned to them from the partnership. Net earnings from self- employment includes an individual’s share, distributed or not, of income or loss from any trade or business carried on by a partnership.

Limited partners are subject to self-employment tax only on guaranteed payments, such as professional fees for services rendered.

3. Corporation

A corporate structure is more complex than other business structures. It requires complying with more regulations and tax requirements.

It may require more tax preparation services than the sole proprietorship or the partnership.

Corporations are formed under the laws of each state and are subject to corporate income tax at the federal and generally at the state level. In addition, any earnings distributed to shareholders in the form of dividends are taxed at individual tax rates on their personal tax returns.

The corporation is an entity that handles the responsibilities of the business. Like a person, the corporation can be taxed and can be held legally liable for its actions.

If you organize your business as a corporation, you are generally not personally liable for the debts of the corporation. (Exceptions may exist under state law.)

When you form a corporation, you create a separate tax-paying entity. Unlike sole proprietors and partnerships, income earned by a corporation is taxed at the corporate level using corporate tax rates. Regular corporations are called C corporations because Subchapter C of Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code is where you find general tax rules affecting corporations and their shareholders.

A corporation files Form 1120 or 1120-A, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return.

If a shareholder is an employee, he pays income tax on his wages, and the corporation and the employee each pay one half of the social security and Medicare taxes and the corporation can deduct its half. A corporate shareholder pays only income tax for any dividends received, which may be subject to a dividends-received deduction.

4. Subchapter S Corporation

The Subchapter S Corporation is a variation of the standard corporation.

The S corporation allows income or losses to be passed through to individual tax returns, similar to a partnership.

An S corporation has the same corporate structure as a standard corporation. It is a legal entity, chartered under state law, and is separate from its shareholders and officers. There is generally limited liability for corporate shareholders. The difference is that the corporation files an election on Form 2553, Election by a Small Business Corporation, to be treated differently for federal tax purposes.

Generally, an S corporation is exempt from federal income tax other than tax on certain capital gains and passive income.

It is treated in the same way as a partnership, in that generally taxes are not paid at the corporate level.

An S corporation files Form 1120S, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return for an S Corporation. The income flows through to be reported on the shareholders’ individual returns. Schedule K-1, Shareholder’s Share of Income, Credits and Deductions, is completed with Form 1120S for each shareholder. The Schedule K-1 tells shareholders their allocable share of corporate income and deductions. Shareholders must pay tax on their share of corporate income, regardless of whether it is actually distributed.

5. Limited Liability Company

A Limited Liability Company (LLC) is a relatively new business structure allowed by state statute.

LLCs are popular because, similar to a corporation, owners generally have limited personal liability for the debts and actions of the LLC. Other features of LLCs are more like a partnership, providing management flexibility and the benefit of pass-through taxation.

Owners of an LLC are called members. Since most states do not restrict ownership, members may include individuals, corporations, other LLCs and foreign entities.

Most states also permit “single member” LLCs, those having only one owner.

A few types of businesses generally cannot be LLCs, such as banks and insurance companies.

Check your state’s requirements and the federal tax regulations for further information. There are special rules for foreign LLCs.

Which structure best suits your business?

One form is not necessarily better than any other. Each business owner must assess his or her own needs. It may be important to seek advice from business incorporation and tax professionals when considering the advantages and disadvantages of a business entity.

Tax Avoidance is Legal; Tax Evasion is a Crime

Tax Avoidance is Legal; Tax Evasion is a Crime

Tax Avoidance is Legal; Tax Evasion is a Crime

As an individual taxpayer and as a business owner, you often have more than one way to complete a taxable transaction. Tax planning evaluates various tax options to determine how to conduct business and personal transactions in order to reduce or eliminate your tax liability.

Although they sound similar “tax avoidance” and “tax evasion” are radically different. Tax  Avoidance lowers your tax bill by structuring your transactions so that you reap the largest tax benefits. Tax avoidance is completely legal and extremely wise. Tax  evasion, on the other hand, is an attempt to reduce your tax liability by deceit, subterfuge, or concealment. Tax evasion is a crime. Often the distinction turns upon whether actions were taken with fraudulent intent.

The IRS notes that the following are some of the most common criminal activities in violations of the tax law:

1. Deliberately under reporting or omitting income.

Omitting your income deliberately is not desire.

2. Keeping two sets of books and making false entries in books and records.

Engaging in accounting irregularities, such as a business’s failure to keep adequate records.

3. Claiming false or overstated deductions on a return.

This can include claiming a large charitable deduction without substantiation. The IRS is always vigilant when it comes to inflated deductions from pass-through entities.

4. Claiming personal expenses as business expenses.

This is an easy trap for a sole practitioner to fall into because often assets, such as a car or a computer, will have both business and personal use.

5. Engaging in a sham transaction.

For example, if payments by a corporation to its stockholders are in fact dividends, calling them “interest” or otherwise attempting to disguise the payments as interest will not entitle the corporation to an interest deduction.

6. Hiding or transferring assets or income.

From simple concealment of funds in a bank account to improper allocations between taxpayers. For example, improperly allocating income to a related taxpayer who is in a lower tax bracket, such as where a corporation makes distributions to the controlling shareholder’s children, is likely to be considered tax fraud.

Note: Keep in mind that tax evasion isn’t limited to federal income tax. Tax evasion can include federal and state employment taxes, state income taxes, and state sales taxes as well.

Minimizing Taxes Requires Skillful Tax Planning:

Tax avoidance requires advance planning. Nearly all tax strategies are based on structuring the transaction to obtain the lowest possible marginal tax rate by using one or more of these strategies:

  • Minimizing taxable income
  • Maximizing tax deductions and tax credits
  • Controlling the timing of income and deductions

Forecasting income and expenses are critically important.

To make use of any of these strategies, it is essential that you estimate your personal and business income for the next few years. The effort to come up with crystal-ball estimates may be difficult and by its very nature will be inexact. The better your estimates, the better the odds that your tax planning efforts will succeed.

Deductions and Credits Reduce Your Taxes

Your tax planning goal is to pay the least amount of tax that is legally possible. You can reduce your ultimate tax bill by attacking on two fronts.

  • First, take full advantage of every available deduction—both business and personal—to reduce your taxable income.
  • Then, once determine the tentative tax due; claim every tax credit that is available to you.

Claiming Deductions Minimizes Taxable Income

To reduce your taxable income, you must be aware of what is deductible and what isn’t. In many cases, a business owner can deduct benefits that would be considered non-deductible personal expenses for an employee. Don’t overlook the possibility of purchasing health insurance, investing for your retirement, or providing perks like a company car through your business.

Consider the big picture when claiming deductions.

One example is electing to expense (deduct) the entire cost of a business asset in the year of purchase. While this will lower your tax liability for the current year, you will not be able to claim depreciation deductions in the future. If you anticipate your business income increasing in the future, you may want to scale back the current deduction so that you can claim depreciation deductions in future years.

Tax Credits Shave Dollars off Your Tax Bill

Once you have claimed every tax deduction that you can, turn your attention to uncovering every possible tax credit that you can claim.

Most federal income tax credits currently available to small business owners are very narrowly targeted to encourage you to take certain actions that lawmakers have deemed desirable. Examples include credits designed to motivate you to make your company more accessible to disabled individuals or to provide health insurance to your workers.

Although you can’t literally lower your tax rate (the rates are established by Congress), there are certain actions you can take that will have a similar result.

These include:

  • Choosing the optimal form of organization for your business (such as corporate, sole proprietorship or partnership).
  • Structuring a transaction so that payments that you receive, are classified as capital gains rather than ordinary income. Long-term capital gains earned by non-corporate taxpayers are subject to lower tax rates than other income.
  • Shifting income from a high-tax-bracket taxpayer (such as yourself) to a lower-bracket taxpayer (such as your child). One fairly simple way is to do, by hiring your children. The tax laws limit the usefulness of this strategy for shifting unearned income to children under age 18, but some tax-saving opportunities still exist.

Control the Tax Year for Income and Deductions

By choosing an appropriate method of tax accounting and by thinking ahead to accelerate (or delay) when you receive income or incur expenses, you can exert some degree of control over your taxable income in any given year.

Careful planning can delay the timing of an event or transaction that gives rise to tax liability. Delaying recognition of income can be valuable.

Control Tax Liability by Postponing Income, Accelerating Deductions

By taking actions that delay the time when particular income items must be reported on your return, you can shift liability on that income to a different tax year. In general, you will be better off if you can postpone the receipt of income until the next year and accelerate payment of expenses into the current tax year. In this way, you can delay your tax liability on the deferred income to the next tax year

Consider These Simple Ideas to Delay Income and Accelerate Deductions

Of course, you should check with a tax professional before taking action in order to ensure that you haven’t overlooked critical factors.

  • Delay collections
  • Delay dividends
  • Delay capital gains
  • Accelerate payments
  • Accelerate large purchases
  • Accelerate operating expenses
  • Don’t try to camouflage the substance of a transaction by the form the transaction takes.
  • Don’t try to disguise the tax impact of a single transaction by breaking it into multiple steps.
  • Don’t expect the IRS to treat your relatives as if they were strangers.

Be Alert! Avoid Common Tax Planning Traps

IRS Focuses on Substance, Not Form

Choosing to use one form of transaction, rather than another, to minimize your tax liability will not (in-and-of-itself) invalidate a transaction for income tax purposes. For example, you can elect to give your child a gift of $10,000 or put the child on the payroll where she can earn $10,000. Doing the tax calculations and picking the method that results in the lowest overall tax liability for the family is a wise course of action.

However, you cannot avoid tax liability simply by the label that you give a transaction. The IRS is going to look at the real purpose—the substance—of the transaction and tax it according. For example, you can give your son a car, or you can sell your son your car. However, you can’t sell your car and claim it was a gift.

Business owners often run afoul of the “substance over form” rule when they attempt to disguise compensation as “dividends” or “return of capital.” The IRS will not be amused; nor will you be when you receive an increased tax bill, plus interest and (most likely) penalties.

Related Taxpayers Face Closer Scrutiny

The IRS pays close attention to transactions that involve taxpayers who have close business or family relationships. In fact, the tax laws have given the IRS special powers to deal with specific areas where related taxpayers have historically used their relationships to unfairly reduce their taxes.

You can expect that IRS agents will closely scrutinize business dealings that you have with family members or other related parties. Often, the IRS will combine its audit of returns for a closely held corporation with an audit of returns of the corporation’s owners or principal officers, in order to discover any attempts to shift personal expenses to the corporation.

Income Tax Accounting for Trusts and Estates Tax Filing

Income Tax Accounting for Trusts and Estates Tax Filing

Income Tax Accounting for Trusts and Estates Tax Filing

Estates and non-grantor trusts must file income tax returns just as individuals do, but with some important differences. For one, their income is taxed at either the entity or beneficiary level depending on whether it is allocated to principal or allocated to distributable income, and whether it is distributed to the beneficiaries. Income tax accounting for trusts and estates has received relatively little attention from tax professionals as well as lawmakers. This is not surprising because of the comparatively few taxpayers affected. In addition, income taxation of estates and trusts does not generate much public interest—unlike the estate and gift tax, As a consequence, practitioners and their clients may not be aware of several tax issues related to estates and trusts. Careful planning that takes these issues into account is no less important than for other types of returns and can reap significant tax benefits. While trusts exist in many forms, this article principally concerns the most commonly encountered type of non-grantor trust. Other trusts that may be of interest to practitioners include those often used in conjunction with a small business, principally electing small business trusts (ESBTs) and qualified subchapter S trusts (QSSTs).

FIDUCIARY ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAXES

Income of estates and non-grantor trusts is taxed at either the entity or the beneficiary level, depending on the answer to the following two questions.

  1. Is each income, loss or deduction item part of the trust’s or estate’s distributable income, or is it part of a change in the principal?
  2. Is the income, loss or deduction item distributed to the beneficiaries, or does the entity retain it?

Fiduciary accounting has been characterized as somewhat similar to governmental accounting because it deals with a fund (the trust principal) and income derived from the fund. The estate’s or trust’s taxable income is computed using the following formula:

Less Deductible trust expenses
Less Personal exemption amount
Equals Taxable income before distribution deduction
Less Distribution deduction
Equals Taxable income
Times Applicable tax rates
Equals Tax liability

Note: Trusts will reach the top marginal tax rate faster than individuals because of the depressed progressive tax schedule. Distribution deduction. To prevent double taxation on their income, estates and trusts are allowed to deduct the lesser of distributable net income (DNI) or the sum of the trust income required to be distributed and other amounts “properly paid or credited or required to be distributed” to the beneficiaries.  DNI is calculated based on accounting income less any tax-exempt income net of allocable expenses. The accounting method and period of the estate or trust determine when the deduction may be claimed; the beneficiary’s tax year is not relevant. Note: Because the tax rates of estates and trusts are likely higher than the tax rates of the individual beneficiaries, it is advisable (if possible) to retain the tax-exempt income and distribute taxable income only. The tax calculation for estates and trusts with regard to long-term capital gains rates is the same as for individuals. Thus, just as for individuals, long-term capital gains and qualified dividends are currently taxed at 15% and, for trusts and estates in the 15% tax bracket.

DIFFERENT INCOME TYPES AT THE BENEFICIARY LEVEL

The character of the trust income at the beneficiary level is determined based on the actual distribution amount and DNI unless the trust instrument or state law specifies otherwise. Direct expenses must be allocated to the respective incomes (for example, rental expenses must be deducted from rental income). Indirect expenses, such as trustee fees, must be allocated between taxable and tax-free income.

NEW LAWS AFFECTING ESTATES AND TRUSTS

The recently enacted health care legislation affects not only individuals and businesses but also the income of trusts and estates, Trusts and estates will be subject in 2013 and subsequent tax years to a 3.8% “unearned income Medicare contribution” tax on the lower of their undistributed net investment income or the amount by which their adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeds the amount where the highest tax bracket begins. Note: Since the threshold for individuals is much higher than for estates and trusts (and since most, if not all, trust income will be considered investment income), taxpayers may want to distribute more (or all) of the trust income to limit the amount subject to the 3.8% extra tax. Note that certain trusts will not be subject to this additional tax. Furthermore, simple trusts and grantor trusts are also likely to be exempt. A simple trust must distribute all current income; thus all income taxes apply at the beneficiary level, and it does not have any undistributed net investment income. A grantor trust is not considered a taxable entity because the grantor (or possibly some other person such as the beneficiary) is presumed to be the owner of the trust. The trust income is therefore taxed at the grantor level.

 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

  • Income taxation of estates and trusts may not receive the same attention as individual income taxes or estate taxes. This article describes some of the general income tax rules of these entities, such as the different rules for allocation of income and deduction items between principal and distributable income, between tax- exempt and taxable income, and between trusts/estates and beneficiaries.
  • These allocations are prescribed either by the trust instrument, state law or the Internal Revenue Code. In some cases, taxpayers have flexibility. Generally, it is advisable to “push” the taxable income and the income taxed at higher rates to the beneficiary, because the tax rate schedule for trusts and estates is depressed, with the highest bracket.
  • Pushing income to beneficiaries may become still more important if lower tax rates under the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act.
  • Also, since income from estates and trusts is mostly investment income, the new 3.8% unearned income Medicare contribution tax will apply to most, if not all, of the trust’s income falling in the highest tax bracket. Individuals are not subject to this tax until their modified AGI reaches $250,000 (married filing jointly and surviving spouses) or $200,000. Thus, distributing trust income to beneficiaries can lower the amount subject to this extra tax.