Modernizing Qualified Domestic Trust Regulations: A Comprehensive Analysis of Treasury Decision 10050
Revising Qualified Domestic Trust Regulations under Section 2056A to Update Outdated References and Procedures, T.D. 10050, 2026-13925, 91 FR 13925 (codified at 26 C.F.R. pt. 20) (effective July 10, 2026)
The federal estate tax marital deduction is one of the most critical estate planning tools available to married couples. However, under Internal Revenue Code (Code) Section 2056(d)(1), this deduction is generally disallowed for property passing to a surviving spouse who is not a United States citizen. To bridge this gap, Section 2056(d)(2)(A) provides an exception, allowing the marital deduction if the property passes to the surviving spouse in a Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT). For decades, practitioners have navigated the strict regulatory requirements of Section 2056A to secure this deduction.
In a significant administrative update, the Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) finalized Treasury Decision 10050 (TD 10050). This decision amends the federal estate tax regulations under Section 2056A to modernize outdated administrative procedures, correct historical drafting oversights, and update organizational references. This article provides tax professionals—including CPAs, Enrolled Agents, and estate attorneys—with a rigorous analysis of these key regulatory updates, the practical rationale behind the changes, comment responses from the preambles, and the critical effective and applicability dates.
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