The Application of New Section 68 to Trusts and Estates: Analyzing JCT Footnote 102 and Unresolved Ambiguities
IRC §68 as amended by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, July 4, 2025
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) fundamentally reshaped Section 68 by replacing the suspended Pease limitation with a new cap on the tax benefit of itemized deductions. Effective for tax years beginning after 2025, the new Section 68 limits the marginal tax-reducing value of itemized deductions by reducing them by 2/37ths of the lesser of (i) total itemized deductions or (ii) the excess of taxable income (computed without itemized deductions) over the threshold for the 37 percent tax bracket.
Crucially, the OBBBA repealed the prior statutory exclusion for trusts and estates under former Section 68(e). Consequently, the new Section 68 limitation now applies to fiduciary taxpayers. Because the statutory language lacks explicit coordination with Subchapter J, this inclusion has created a storm of technical ambiguities, double taxation risks, and conflicts with long-standing fiduciary income tax principles.
The Joint Committee on Taxation's Footnote 102
The Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) Blue Book sought to clarify the mechanics of Section 68's application to trusts and estates in its Footnote 102. The JCT's explanation relies on a strict, mechanical reading of the Internal Revenue Code:
- Section 641(b) as the Gateway: The JCT states that Section 68 applies to estates and trusts by virtue of Section 641(b), which dictates that the taxable income of an estate or trust is generally computed in the same manner as an individual.
- The Definition of Itemized Deductions: Section 63(d) defines "itemized deductions" as all allowable deductions other than those used to arrive at adjusted gross income (AGI) under Section 62 and those specifically listed in Section 63(b).
- Classification of Fiduciary Deductions: Because unique fiduciary deductions—such as the personal exemption equivalent under Section 642(b) and the distribution deductions under Sections 651 and 661—are not excluded by Section 62 or 63(b), the JCT classifies them as itemized deductions subject to the new 2/37ths limitation.
- The Limitation of Section 67(e): The JCT acknowledges that Treasury Regulation section 1.67-4(a)(1)(ii) explicitly states that these fiduciary deductions "are not itemized deductions under section 63(d)". However, the JCT argues this regulation only interprets Section 67(e), which statutorily limits its own application with the phrase "For purposes of this section". Because Section 67(e) is legally constrained to Section 67 (miscellaneous itemized deductions), the JCT concludes it does not shield these deductions from being classified as itemized deductions for the purposes of Section 68.
Criticisms of the JCT’s Logic
Tax commentators, including Justin T. Miller in an article published in Tax Notes Today Federal on June 8, 2026, have sharply criticized the JCT’s interpretation for ignoring the broader structural framework of Subchapter J.
- Omission of Qualifying Statutory Language: Miller points out that while the JCT relies heavily on Section 641(b) to apply individual rules to trusts, Footnote 102 notably omits the crucial qualifying language of that exact statute: "except as otherwise provided in this part".
- Failure to Address Section 642(c): The JCT explanation completely ignores Section 642(c), failing to address how the limitation interacts with the unique charitable deductions available to trusts and estates.
- Inconsistent Definitions of AGI: Critics highlight that the Code and regulations define AGI for trusts and estates differently across various provisions (e.g., Sections 165(h)(4)(C), 1411(a)(2)(B)(i), and 641(c)(2)(E)(ii)). Relying rigidly on Section 63(d) without coordinating with Subchapter J creates irreconcilable technical conflicts.
Other Areas of Unclarity for Trusts and Estates
Beyond the classification of distribution deductions, several other areas remain severely unclear:
1. Disproportionate Impact on Preferential-Rate Income The 2/37ths reduction was designed to cap the tax benefit of deductions at 35 percent for taxpayers in the 37 percent bracket. However, trusts and estates hit the 37 percent bracket at a highly compressed threshold of just over $16,000. Section 68 does not currently distinguish between ordinary income and income taxed at preferential rates under Section 1(h), such as long-term capital gains and qualified dividends. If a trust offsets capital gains (taxed at a maximum of 20 percent) with itemized deductions, Section 68 would apply the 2/37ths reduction, inequitably dropping the effective tax benefit of those deductions to approximately 18.92 percent.
2. Erosion of the Conduit Principle and Double Taxation Subchapter J treats trusts and estates as "quasi-conduits," using distribution deductions under Sections 651 and 661 to allocate taxable income to beneficiaries. If Section 68 limits these distribution deductions, it artificially inflates the entity's taxable income. The trust or estate would pay tax on the limited portion of the distribution, while the beneficiary would still include the full distribution in their gross income under Sections 652 or 662. This effectively creates double taxation on the exact same income, breaking the core mechanics of Subchapter J.
3. Conflicts with Charitable and IRD Deductions Section 642(c) allows trusts and estates to take charitable deductions "without limitation". Applying Section 68 to a permanent charitable set-aside deduction under Section 642(c)(2) forces tax-exempt charities to indirectly bear the burden of an income tax. Furthermore, because the tax caused by the limitation reduces the amount available for charity, it creates an impossibly complex "algebraic loop" where the tax recalculates the limitation continuously. Limiting the Section 691(c) deduction also defeats its foundational purpose of mitigating double taxation on Income in Respect of a Decedent (IRD).
4. DNI Calculation Circularity The New York State Bar Association (NYSBA) noted that applying Section 68 creates severe circularity issues when calculating Distributable Net Income (DNI). To calculate taxable income, a trust must know its distribution deduction; to compute the distribution deduction, it must know DNI; but DNI requires knowing taxable income, which is impacted by the Section 68 limitation on itemized deductions.
Recommendations Submitted by Tax Organizations
Professional organizations have heavily advocated for technical corrections and administrative guidance to resolve these flaws.
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)
- Preferential-Rate Income: The AICPA recommends that Treasury and the IRS "issue guidance clarifying that the section 68 limitation applies only to non-preferential rate income exceeding the threshold at which the 37% tax rate bracket begins."
- Fiduciary Deductions and Section 67(e): The AICPA recommends the government "provide that the LID does not apply to trusts and estates with respect to deductions under sections 642(b), 651, and 661, and administration expenses." They further advise that "Treasury and the IRS should also provide that under section 68, for purposes of determining the AGI of an estate or trust, the AGI of an estate or trust is AGI as defined in section 67(e)."
- Charitable and IRD Deductions: The AICPA urges the government to "Similar to prior section 68(e), provide that the LID does not apply to trusts and estates with respect to deductions under sections 642(c) and 691(c)." They alternatively suggest "clarifying that deductions under sections 642(c) and 691(c) are above-the-line deductions rather than itemized deductions." If the government does apply the rule to 642(c), they ask to "clarify that Hartwick College prevents this reduction from reducing the section 642(c) deduction."
The American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC)
- Preferential-Rate Income: ACTEC suggests Congress "consider a technical amendment to section 68(a)(2) that would read as follows: ‘(2) so much of the taxable income of the taxpayer for the taxable year (determined without regard to this section and increased by such amount of itemized deductions) reduced by the amount of the taxpayer’s income subject to tax under section 1(h)’".
- Fiduciary Deductions: ACTEC recommends Congress "consider a technical amendment of section 68 to clarify that it only applies to deductions that would be computed in the same manner as in the case of an individual, and not to deductions that only apply to estates and trusts as otherwise provided in Subchapter J of the Code. In addition to the deductions to which section 67(e) refers, we think the deduction allowed by section 642(c) should also be expressly excepted from the application of section 68...".
- Section 67(e) Expansion: ACTEC suggests Congress "consider a technical amendment of section 67(e) to provide that it applies for purposes of section 68 as well as for purposes of section 67."
- Charitable Deductions: Regarding the conflict in statutory text, ACTEC advises Treasury/IRS to "consider issuing guidance under section 68 to resolve the ambiguity in the Code by either providing that the 'without limitation' language in section 642(c) takes precedence over section 68 or that section 68 takes precedence over the 'without limitation' language in section 642(c)." If the limitation applies, they recommend guidance "explicitly permitting the amount of the section 642(c)(2) deduction to be calculated without reduction for any income tax caused by the section 68 disallowance."
The New York State Bar Association (NYSBA)
- Distribution Deductions: The NYSBA advises that "The Treasury Department and Service should determine whether they have the authority to treat the Section 651 and 661 distribution deductions as non-itemized deductions for purposes of Section 68." If not, they "could seek a technical correction from Congress to provide that the Section 651 and 661 deductions are not treated as itemized deductions for purposes of Section 68."
- Charitable Deductions: They recommend the government "determine whether they have the authority to treat the charitable deductions available to estates as non-itemized deductions for purposes of Section 68, to the extent that the application of Section 68 would otherwise cause charitable beneficiaries to bear the burden of a tax on income that, if received directly by the charitable beneficiaries, would be exempt from tax."
- Warning Against Broad Section 67(e) Application: In stark contrast to the AICPA and ACTEC, the NYSBA warns against a blanket application of Section 67(e), stating: "The Treasury Department and Service should not incorporate the Section 67(e)(1) definition of adjusted gross income into Section 68." The NYSBA warns that pretending Section 67(e) does not exist for the rest of the calculation could inadvertently recharacterize administration expenses as fully nondeductible miscellaneous itemized deductions.
- DNI Calculation: To solve the circular math problem, the NYSBA recommends that "The Treasury Department and the Service should clarify that in computing the Section 68 limitation, a hypothetical computation of distributable net income, determined without regard to Section 68, is required."
List of Sources Used in Preparing the Article:
- 26 U.S. Code § 63 - Taxable income defined
- 26 U.S. Code § 641 - Imposition of tax
- 26 U.S. Code § 67 - 2-percent floor on miscellaneous itemized deductions
- Joint Committee on Taxation Blue Book, “11. Limitation on Tax Benefit of Itemized Deductions (sec. 70111 of the Act and sec. 68 of the Code)”, Footnote 102,
- Justin Miller, "The Fate of a Trust or Estate Under New Section 68," Tax Notes Today Federal, June 8, 2026
- AICPA Tax Executive Committee, "AICPA comments requesting AICPA comments on IRS guidance for limitation on itemized deductions and Trump accounts"
- November 10, 2025 Letter, “Comments of The American College of Trust and Estate Counsel”
- New York State Bar Association Tax Section Report No. 1517, December 1, 2025
Prepared with assistance from NotebookLM.
