Executive Summary
A Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT) is an irrevocable trust in which the grantor retains the right to receive a fixed annuity payment for a specified term of years. At the end of the term, any remaining trust assets pass to the remainder beneficiaries (typically children). The GRAT's power lies in its ability to transfer appreciation above the IRC §7520 hurdle rate to beneficiaries with little or no gift tax — potentially passing millions of dollars in wealth at a zero or near-zero gift tax cost.
The Magic of GRATs: If you fund a GRAT with $10 million of assets that appreciate at 15% annually, and the §7520 rate is 5%, the excess appreciation (roughly 10% per year) passes to your beneficiaries completely gift-tax-free. The "zeroed-out" GRAT structure means you use little or no lifetime exemption.
What Is a GRAT?
A GRAT works by exploiting the difference between:
- Actual investment performance of the trust assets, and
- The IRS's assumed rate of return (the IRC §7520 rate)
The grantor transfers appreciating assets to the GRAT and retains an annuity interest. The gift tax value of the transfer is the remainder interest — the value of the assets minus the present value of the retained annuity. By setting the annuity payments high enough, the remainder interest (the "gift") can be reduced to near zero.
If the trust assets outperform the §7520 rate, the excess passes to the remainder beneficiaries gift-tax-free and estate-tax-free.
When GRATs "Win" and "Lose"
- GRAT wins: If assets appreciate faster than the §7520 rate — the excess passes to beneficiaries tax-free
- GRAT breaks even: If assets appreciate at exactly the §7520 rate — nothing passes to beneficiaries (annuity payments return everything to grantor)
- GRAT loses: If assets depreciate or underperform the §7520 rate — nothing passes to beneficiaries, but the grantor gets their assets back (no economic loss, just the cost of setting up the GRAT)
Key Insight: GRATs are a "heads I win, tails I break even" proposition — the worst-case scenario (underperformance) simply returns assets to the grantor through annuity payments.
Legal Structure & Parties
Grantor/Settlor
- Creates and funds the GRAT
- Retains the right to receive annuity payments for the GRAT term
- Is treated as the owner of the trust for income tax purposes (grantor trust under IRC §671-679)
- Must survive the GRAT term for the estate tax benefit to apply
Trustee
- Administers the trust and makes annuity payments to the grantor
- May be the grantor (GRATs are one of the few irrevocable trusts where the grantor can serve as trustee — because the grantor's retained interest is a qualified interest under §2702)
- Must make timely annuity payments according to the trust terms
- Manages trust investments during the term
Remainder Beneficiaries
- Receive whatever remains in the trust after all annuity payments are made
- Typically children, grandchildren, or a dynasty trust
- Receive assets at the grantor's carryover basis (NO step-up in basis)
IRC §2702 — The Statutory Framework
Background
IRC §2702, enacted as part of Chapter 14 in 1990, was designed to prevent undervaluation of retained interests in transfers between family members. Before §2702, grantors could retain interests valued using unrealistically favorable assumptions, enabling them to transfer large amounts with minimal gift tax.
Qualified Interest Requirements
Under §2702(b), a retained interest is valued at zero UNLESS it is a "qualified interest" — specifically:
- Qualified annuity interest (GRAT): A fixed dollar amount or fixed percentage of initial FMV, payable at least annually
- Qualified unitrust interest (GRUT): A fixed percentage of annual FMV, payable at least annually
- Qualified remainder interest: A right to receive trust assets at the end of the term
If the retained interest does NOT qualify, it is valued at zero — meaning the entire transfer is treated as a gift.
Treasury Reg. §25.2702-3
The Treasury Regulations specify the requirements for a qualified annuity interest:
- Payment must be a fixed amount payable at least annually
- The annuity amount may increase by up to 20% per year over the preceding year (the "graduated GRAT")
- Payments must be made from trust income and principal
- The trust term must be a fixed period or the grantor's life (not the shorter of the two)
- No distributions may be made to anyone other than the grantor during the term
Tax Implications
Gift Tax Calculation
The gift tax value of a GRAT transfer equals:
Gift = FMV of assets transferred - Present value of retained annuity interest
⚠️ This is illustrative language only. Consult a licensed attorney before using any provision in a legal document.The present value of the annuity is calculated using:
- The IRC §7520 rate (120% of the mid-term Applicable Federal Rate, compounded annually)
- The grantor's age (from IRS actuarial tables)
- The GRAT term (number of years)
- The annuity amount (fixed annual payment)
Estate Tax — The Mortality Risk
If the grantor dies during the GRAT term, the trust assets are included in the grantor's gross estate under IRC §2036 (retained interest in transferred property). This negates the estate planning benefit entirely.
- Dies during term: Full estate inclusion of trust assets (as if the GRAT never existed)
- Survives the term: Trust assets pass to remainder beneficiaries free of estate and gift tax (to the extent they exceed the annuity payments)
Income Tax — Grantor Trust
The GRAT is a grantor trust under IRC §677 (the grantor retains the annuity interest). This means:
- All trust income is reported on the grantor's personal Form 1040
- Annuity payments from the trust to the grantor are not taxable events (grantor is deemed to own the trust for income tax purposes)
- No capital gains tax when the trust sells assets (unless the trust terminates grantor trust status)
The Hurdle Rate (IRC §7520)
What Is the §7520 Rate?
The IRC §7520 rate is the IRS's assumed rate of return used to value retained interests in GRATs, QPRTs, and other split-interest trusts. It is:
§7520 Rate = 120% × Federal Mid-Term AFR (rounded to nearest 0.2%)
⚠️ This is illustrative language only. Consult a licensed attorney before using any provision in a legal document.The rate is published monthly by the IRS in Revenue Rulings.
How the Rate Affects GRATs
| §7520 Rate Environment | GRAT Effectiveness | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Low rates (2-4%) | Highly effective | Small hurdle → easier for assets to outperform → more wealth transferred |
| Moderate rates (4-6%) | Effective | Moderate hurdle → still works with appreciating assets |
| High rates (6%+) | Less effective | High hurdle → assets must significantly outperform for any wealth transfer |
Historical Context: The §7520 rate was below 2% from 2020-2022 (reaching a historic low of 0.8% in May 2020), making that period extraordinarily favorable for GRATs. As of 2025, rates are in the moderate range, and GRATs remain effective with sufficiently appreciating assets.
Selecting the Best Month
The grantor can elect to use the §7520 rate from:
- The month of the transfer, or
- Either of the two preceding months
This gives the grantor a three-month window to select the most favorable (lowest) rate.
Zeroed-Out GRATs (Walton GRATs)
The Technique
A zeroed-out GRAT (also called a Walton GRAT, after Walton v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2000-12, aff'd, 115 T.C. 589) is structured so that the present value of the retained annuity interest equals the fair market value of the assets transferred — resulting in a remainder interest (gift) of approximately zero.
How It Works
- Grantor transfers $10 million to a GRAT with a 2-year term
- The annuity is set so that the present value of annuity payments (discounted at the §7520 rate) equals $10 million
- The taxable gift (remainder interest) = $10 million - $10 million = $0 (or a nominal amount)
- No lifetime exemption used; no gift tax owed
- If the assets appreciate above the §7520 rate during the 2-year term, the excess passes to beneficiaries tax-free
Walton v. Commissioner
In Walton v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2000-12 (aff'd by stipulation, 11th Cir.), the Tax Court held that a GRAT could be structured with a remainder interest valued at zero — rejecting the IRS's argument that a zeroed-out GRAT was not a valid qualified interest trust. The IRS subsequently acquiesced to this result, and zeroed-out GRATs are now standard practice.
Rolling & Cascading GRATs
The Strategy
A rolling GRAT (or cascading GRAT) involves creating a series of short-term (typically 2-year) GRATs in succession:
- GRAT 1: Fund with assets; 2-year term
- At the end of GRAT 1's term, the remainder passes to the grantor (as annuity) or to beneficiaries
- GRAT 2: The grantor immediately funds a new GRAT with the annuity payments received from GRAT 1
- This process repeats every 2 years
Advantages of Rolling GRATs
- Reduced mortality risk: A 2-year term has much lower mortality risk than a 10-year term
- Diversification of timing risk: Multiple GRATs capture different market conditions
- Compounding effect: Appreciation from early GRATs is "rolled" into new GRATs, magnifying wealth transfer
- Market timing: If one GRAT underperforms, others may outperform — the diversification benefit
Short-Term vs. Long-Term GRATs
| Feature | Short-Term (2-Year) | Long-Term (10-Year) |
|---|---|---|
| Mortality Risk | Very low | Significant |
| Required Appreciation | High (must beat hurdle in 2 years) | Lower (compounding over 10 years) |
| Best For | High-growth assets (pre-IPO stock, volatile assets) | Steady-growth assets |
| Administrative Complexity | Higher (multiple GRATs) | Lower (single GRAT) |
| Legislative Risk | Low (already compliant) | Low |
Suitable Assets
GRATs work best with assets expected to appreciate significantly during the GRAT term:
| Asset Type | GRAT Suitability | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-IPO stock | Excellent | Potential for massive appreciation; most famous GRAT success stories |
| Closely-held business interests | Excellent | Valuation discounts + appreciation potential |
| Growth stocks | Good | Market appreciation likely to exceed §7520 rate |
| Real estate | Good | Appreciation + income; use appraised value |
| S-corp/LLC interests | Good | Valuation discounts; income flows through |
| Bonds/Fixed income | Poor | Returns unlikely to significantly exceed §7520 rate |
| Cash | Poor | No appreciation potential |
| Diversified portfolio | Moderate | Average market returns may modestly exceed §7520 rate |
Famous Example: The Walton family (Walmart) and the Lauder family (Estée Lauder) reportedly used GRATs with company stock to transfer billions of dollars in wealth with minimal gift tax.
Formation Requirements
Essential Steps
- Select the §7520 rate: Choose the most favorable rate from the current and two prior months
- Value the assets: Obtain a qualified appraisal for hard-to-value assets (business interests, real estate)
- Draft the GRAT instrument: Must satisfy Treasury Reg. §25.2702-3 requirements for a qualified annuity interest
- Calculate the annuity: Work with advisors to determine the annuity amount that achieves the desired remainder value (typically zeroed-out)
- Transfer assets to the GRAT: Execute proper transfer documentation
- File Form 709: Report the gift (even if zeroed-out, reporting is required)
- Make timely annuity payments: The trustee must make annuity payments by the anniversary date each year
- Maintain grantor trust status: Ensure the GRAT remains a grantor trust throughout the term
Annuity Payment Requirements
- Payments must be made at least annually
- Payments must be made by the anniversary date of the trust's creation (or within 105 days of the anniversary under the regulations)
- Payments can be in cash or in kind (distribution of trust assets valued at FMV)
- In-kind payments must be properly documented and valued
The Mortality Risk
The Critical Risk Factor
If the grantor dies during the GRAT term, the trust assets are included in the grantor's gross estate under IRC §2036. The estate tax benefit is entirely lost:
- Surviving the term: 100% of appreciation above the §7520 rate passes to beneficiaries estate-tax-free
- Dying during the term: 100% of trust assets are included in the estate (same result as if the GRAT was never created)
Mitigation Strategies
- Short-term GRATs (2-year rolling): Minimize the survival requirement
- Life insurance: Purchase a term policy covering the GRAT term to replace lost wealth transfer if the grantor dies
- Health assessment: Consider the grantor's health when selecting the GRAT term
- Multiple GRATs: Diversify across several short-term GRATs rather than one long-term GRAT
Sample Provision Language
⚠️ DISCLAIMER: The following language is provided for educational and illustrative purposes only.
Qualified Annuity Payment
ARTICLE III — ANNUITY PAYMENTS Section 3.1. During the Annuity Period, the Trustee shall pay to the Grantor, in each taxable year of the Trust, an annuity amount equal to [PERCENTAGE]% of the initial net fair market value of the property transferred to this Trust as finally determined for federal gift tax purposes. The annuity amount for the first taxable year shall be $[AMOUNT]. The annuity amount shall be payable from income and, to the extent income is not sufficient, from principal. Section 3.2. The first annuity payment shall be made no later than the date that is one hundred five (105) days after the anniversary of the creation of this Trust. The annuity shall be paid in no event less frequently than annually.
⚠️ This is illustrative language only. Consult a licensed attorney before using any provision in a legal document.Remainder Distribution
ARTICLE IV — DISTRIBUTION OF REMAINDER Section 4.1. Upon expiration of the Annuity Period, the Trustee shall distribute the entire remaining balance of the Trust, free of trust, to the Grantor's then-living descendants, per stirpes. If no descendant of the Grantor is then living, the Trustee shall distribute the remaining balance to [ALTERNATE BENEFICIARIES].
⚠️ This is illustrative language only. Consult a licensed attorney before using any provision in a legal document.Legislative Risk
Proposed GRAT Reform
Congress has repeatedly proposed legislation to restrict zeroed-out GRATs:
- Minimum 10-year term: Would increase mortality risk substantially
- Minimum remainder value: Would require a minimum taxable gift (e.g., 25% of assets transferred)
- Prohibition on zeroed-out GRATs: Would require a meaningful gift tax cost
These proposals have been included in various versions of:
- The Obama Administration's "Greenbook" proposals (2012-2016)
- The Biden Administration's fiscal year budgets
- Various Congressional tax reform bills
Current Status (2025): No GRAT reform legislation has been enacted. Zeroed-out, short-term GRATs remain fully valid. However, the persistent legislative proposals create uncertainty — providing additional urgency to use GRATs while they remain available in their current form.
Common Pitfalls & Compliance
1. Missing Annuity Payment Deadlines
Failing to make annuity payments on time (by the 105th day after the anniversary). Solution: Calendar all payment dates; make payments early.
2. Improper Annuity Payment Calculation
Calculating the annuity based on an incorrect initial value. Solution: Use a qualified appraiser and verify calculations with the gift tax return.
3. Dying During the GRAT Term
The unavoidable mortality risk. Solution: Use short-term rolling GRATs and consider life insurance.
4. Asset Valuation Issues
Using aggressive valuations that the IRS may challenge. Solution: Obtain qualified appraisals for hard-to-value assets; use reasonable valuation discounts.
5. Failure to File Form 709
Not reporting the GRAT gift on the gift tax return. Solution: File Form 709 in the year of the GRAT creation, even for zeroed-out GRATs.
6. Inadequate Trust Terms
Trust instrument that doesn't satisfy the qualified interest requirements of Reg. §25.2702-3. Solution: Engage experienced estate planning counsel; use tested GRAT language.
Comparison with Other Trust Types
| Feature | GRAT | SLAT | Dynasty Trust | QPRT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gift Tax Cost | Near zero (zeroed-out) | Full exemption amount | Full exemption amount | Remainder interest value |
| Primary Benefit | Transfer appreciation above hurdle rate | Lock in TCJA exemption | Multi-generational tax-free growth | Transfer residence at reduced cost |
| Mortality Risk | Critical (estate inclusion if grantor dies during term) | No mortality risk | No mortality risk | Same as GRAT (must survive term) |
| Best Asset Type | Appreciating/volatile assets | Diversified portfolio | Any (long-term growth) | Personal residence |
| Uses Lifetime Exemption | Little or none | Yes (significant) | Yes (significant) | Partial |
| Grantor Trust | Yes | Yes | Typically yes | Yes |
- GRATs transfer appreciation above the §7520 hurdle rate to beneficiaries with little or no gift tax cost — a "heads I win, tails I break even" proposition.
- Zeroed-out GRATs (validated in Walton v. Commissioner) allow massive wealth transfer using zero or minimal lifetime exemption.
- Rolling/cascading short-term GRATs reduce mortality risk while capturing market appreciation across multiple time periods.
- The §7520 rate determines GRAT effectiveness — lower rates create lower hurdles, making GRATs more powerful.
- Mortality risk is the critical downside — if the grantor dies during the term, the entire estate tax benefit is lost under IRC §2036.
- GRATs work best with highly appreciating assets — pre-IPO stock, closely-held business interests, and growth stocks are ideal.
- Legislative risk exists — Congress has repeatedly proposed restricting zeroed-out GRATs, creating urgency to use them while available.
- Form 709 must be filed even for zeroed-out GRATs, and annuity payments must be timely (within 105 days of each anniversary).