For many people, building wealth is an important goal, but protecting that wealth and ensuring it is passed down as intended is equally critical. Estate planning offers a variety of tools designed to safeguard assets, provide for loved ones, and reduce potential tax liability. Among these tools are specialized irrevocable trusts such as the Qualified Terminable Interest Property (QTIP) trust and the Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT). Both serve distinct purposes and can play a vital role in a well-crafted plan but understanding the differences between them is crucial to determining which one is right for you. Toward that end, the Indianapolis attorneys at Frank & Kraft explain the key differences between QTIP and QDOT trusts and help you decide which is right for your Indiana estate plan.
What Is a QTIP Trust and When Might One Be Useful?
Blended families have become increasingly common, and with them come estate planning challenges. If you were married previously and have children from that marriage, you undoubtedly want to provide for those children in your estate plan. During that marriage, you may have created reciprocal Wills or a joint estate plan in which each spouse left everything to the other, and the children inherited once both parents were gone. This type of arrangement worked because you and your former spouse trusted each other to preserve assets for the children. If you are now contemplating remarriage or have already remarried, that same approach to estate planning may not feel safe because the concern remains that if everything is left outright to your new spouse, the children from the first marriage could be intentionally or unintentionally disinherited. Once assets transfer to your surviving spouse, he or she has full legal control, meaning those resources could be spent, given away, or left to someone else entirely.
A QTIP trust provides a solution to this problem. With this type of trust, the Grantor (creator of the trust) can arrange for a surviving spouse to benefit from the trust during his or her lifetime, while still ensuring that the remainder passes to the intended heirs, such as children from a prior relationship. The mechanics are relatively straightforward. The Grantor names a Trustee to manage and administer the trust property. When the Grantor dies, the surviving spouse becomes the income beneficiary. He or she may receive income generated by the trust but does not have unrestricted access to the trust principal. In some cases, the spouse may also be granted the right to reside in the family home for life, but without outright ownership. Once the spouse passes away, the remaining assets transfer to the named remainder beneficiaries. With a QTIP trust your surviving spouse is provided for financially, but the ultimate distribution to children or other heirs is protected. From a tax standpoint, QTIP trusts also offer an important benefit. Although a QTIP is an irrevocable trust, the Executor of the estate can elect to apply the marital deduction, thereby deferring federal estate taxes until the surviving spouse dies.
What Is a QDOT Trust and Why Might It Be Needed?
In the United States, families are increasingly international with many U.S. citizens choosing to marry spouses who were born in other countries. While a significant percentage of foreign-born spouses eventually obtain U.S. citizenship, a sizeable portion remain non-citizens. When a spouse is not a U.S. citizen, additional estate planning considerations come into play, especially with respect to the marital deduction. Ordinarily, federal law allows an unlimited marital deduction, meaning one spouse can leave an unlimited amount of assets to the other without triggering estate tax liability. The idea is that taxes will eventually be paid upon the surviving spouse’s death. When the surviving spouse is not a U.S. citizen, however, the deduction is limited to $190,000 (as of 2025). The concern is that the non-citizen spouse may relocate and move assets outside of the country, making them unreachable by U.S. tax authorities.
A Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT) addresses the marital deduction issue. By placing assets intended for a non-citizen spouse into a QDOT, the estate can still take advantage of the marital deduction, but with conditions designed to protect the government’s tax interests. Like a QTIP, the QDOT allows the surviving spouse to receive income generated by the trust but access to the principal is restricted. The non-citizen spouse may only receive distributions of principal in cases of demonstrated need. Specifically, the Internal Revenue Service requires proof of an “immediate and substantial” hardship relating to health, education, maintenance, or support. The Trustee, who must meet strict eligibility requirements, controls whether such distributions are made. Upon the death of the non-citizen spouse, the remaining trust assets pass to the remainder beneficiaries designated by the Grantor, often children or grandchildren. At that time, any federal or Indiana estate taxes that are owed must be paid.
Can We Help You Incorporate a QTIP or QDOT into Your Indiana Estate Plan?
For more information, please join us for an upcoming FREE seminar. If you would like assistance incorporating a QTIP or QDOT into your Indiana estate plan, contact an experienced Indianapolis estate planning attorney at Frank & Kraft by calling (317) 684-1100 to schedule an appointment.
The post QDOT vs. QTIP: What Is the Difference and Which One Should I Include in My Indiana Estate Plan? appeared first on Frank & Kraft, Attorneys at Law.
Read MoreBy: Paul A. Kraft, Estate Planning Attorney
Title: QDOT vs. QTIP: What Is the Difference and Which One Should I Include in My Indiana Estate Plan?
Sourced From: frankkraft.com/qdot-vs-qtip-what-is-the-difference-and-which-one-should-i-include-in-my-indiana-estate-plan/
Published Date: Thu, 09 Oct 2025 17:30:00 +0000
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