[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 14]
[Revised as of January 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR20.2056A-4]

[Page 432-441]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 20_ESTATE TAX; ESTATES OF DECEDENTS DYING AFTER AUGUST 16, 
1954--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  20.2056A-4  Procedures for conforming marital trusts and nontrust 
marital transfers to the requirements of a qualified domestic trust.

    (a) Marital trusts--(1) In general. If an interest in property 
passes from the decedent to a trust for the benefit of a noncitizen 
surviving spouse and if the trust otherwise qualifies for a marital 
deduction but for the provisions of section 2056(d)(1)(A), the property 
interest is treated as passing to the surviving spouse in a QDOT if the 
trust is reformed, either in accordance with the terms of the decedent's 
will or trust agreement or pursuant to a judicial proceeding, to meet 
the requirements of a QDOT. For this purpose, the requirements of a QDOT 
include all of the applicable requirements set forth in Sec.  20.2056A-
2, and the requirements of Sec.  20.2056A-2T(d). A reformation pursuant 
to the terms of the decedent's will or trust instrument must be 
completed by the time prescribed (including extensions) for filing the 
decedent's estate tax return. For purposes of this paragraph (a), a 
return filed prior to the due date (including extensions) is considered 
filed on the last date that the return is required to be filed 
(including extensions), and a late return filed at any time after the 
due date is considered filed on the date that it is actually filed.
    (2) Judicial reformations. In general, a reformation pursuant to a 
judicial proceeding is permitted under this section if the reformation 
is commenced on or before the due date (determined with

[[Page 433]]

regard to extensions actually granted) for filing the return of tax 
imposed by chapter 11 of the Internal Revenue Code, regardless of the 
date that the return is actually filed. The reformation (either pursuant 
to a judicial proceeding or otherwise) must result in a trust that is 
effective under local law. The reformed trust may be revocable by the 
spouse, or otherwise be subject to the spouse's general power of 
appointment, provided that no person (including the spouse) has the 
power to amend the trust during the continued existence of the trust 
such that it would no longer qualify as a QDOT. Prior to the time that 
the judicial reformation is completed, the trust must be treated as a 
QDOT. Thus, the trustee of the trust is responsible for filing the Form 
706-QDT, paying any section 2056A estate tax that becomes due, and 
filing the annual statement required under Sec.  20.2056A-2T(d)(3), if 
applicable. Failure to comply with these requirements may cause the 
trust to be subject to the anti-abuse rule under Sec.  20.2056A-
2T(d)(1)(iv). In addition, if the judicial reformation is terminated 
prior to the time that the reformation is completed, the estate of the 
decedent is required to pay the increased estate tax imposed on the 
decedent's estate (plus interest and any applicable penalties) that 
becomes due at the time of such termination as a result of the failure 
of the trust to comply with section 2056(d). See section 6511 as to 
applicable time periods for credit or refund of tax.
    (3) Tolling of statutory assessment period. For the tolling of the 
statute of limitations in the case of a judicial reformation, see 
section 2056(d)(5)(B).
    (b) Nontrust marital transfers--(1) In general. Under section 
2056(d)(2)(B), if an interest in property passes outright from a 
decedent to a noncitizen surviving spouse either by testamentary bequest 
or devise, by operation of law, or pursuant to an annuity or other 
similar plan or arrangement, and such property interest otherwise 
qualifies for a marital deduction except that it does not pass in a 
QDOT, solely for purposes of section 2056(d)(2)(A), the property is 
treated as passing to the surviving spouse in a QDOT if the property 
interest is either actually transferred to a QDOT before the estate tax 
return is filed and on or before the last date prescribed by law that 
the QDOT election may be made, or is assigned to a QDOT under an 
enforceable and irrevocable written assignment made on or before the 
date on which the return is filed and on or before the last date 
prescribed by law that the QDOT election may be made. The transfer or 
assignment of property to a QDOT may be made by the surviving spouse, 
the surviving spouse's legal representative (if the surviving spouse is 
incompetent), or the personal representative of the surviving spouse's 
estate (if the surviving spouse has died). The QDOT to which the 
property is transferred may be created by the decedent (during life or 
by will), by the surviving spouse, or by the executor. For purposes of 
section 2056(d)(2)(B), if no property other than the property passing to 
the surviving spouse from the decedent is transferred to the QDOT, the 
transferee QDOT need not be in a form such that the property transferred 
to the QDOT would qualify for a marital deduction under section 2056(a). 
However, if other property is or has been transferred to the QDOT, 100 
percent of the value of the transferee QDOT must qualify for the marital 
deduction under section 2056. For example, if the decedent, a U.S. 
citizen, bequeaths property to a trust that does not satisfy the 
requirements of section 2056(b)(5) or (7), or to a trust that does not 
qualify as an estate trust under Sec.  20.2056(c)-2(b)(1)(i)-(iii), that 
trust cannot be used as a transferee QDOT by the surviving spouse, since 
after that trust is fully funded the portion of the value of the trust 
attributable to property bequeathed to the trust by the decedent will 
not qualify for a marital deduction under section 2056. Similarly, if 
the decedent, a nonresident not a citizen of the United States, 
bequeaths foreign situs assets to a trust created under his will, the 
surviving spouse may not transfer U.S. situs assets passing to the 
spouse outside of the will to that trust under this paragraph. See Sec.  
20.2056A-3(c) with respect to protective elections. See Sec.  20.2056A-
3(a) with respect to the time limitations for making the QDOT election.

[[Page 434]]

    (2) Form of transfer or assignment. A transfer or assignment of 
property to a QDOT must be in writing and otherwise be in accordance 
with all local law requirements for such assignment or transfer. The 
transfer or assignment may be of a specific asset or a group of assets, 
or a fractional share of either, or may be of a pecuniary amount. A 
transfer or assignment of less than an entire interest in an asset or a 
group of assets may be expressed by means of a formula (such as the 
minimum amount necessary to reduce the estate tax to zero). In the case 
of a transfer, a copy of the trust instrument evidencing the transfer 
must be submitted with the decedent's estate tax return. In the case of 
an assignment, a copy of the assignment must be submitted with the 
decedent's estate tax return.
    (3) Assets eligible for transfer or assignment. If a transfer or 
assignment is of a specific asset or group of assets, only assets 
included in the decedent's gross estate and passing from the decedent to 
the spouse (or the proceeds from the sale, exchange or conversion of 
such assets) may be transferred or assigned to the QDOT. The noncitizen 
surviving spouse may not transfer or assign to the QDOT property owned 
by the surviving spouse at the time of the decedent's death in lieu of 
property included in the decedent's gross estate that passes to the 
spouse (or in lieu of the proceeds from the sale, exchange or conversion 
of such includible assets). In addition, if only a portion of an asset 
is includible in the decedent's gross estate, the spouse may only 
transfer the portion that is so includible to the transferee trust under 
this paragraph (b)(3).
    (4) Pecuniary assignment--special rules. If the assignment is 
expressed in the form of a pecuniary amount (such as a fixed dollar 
amount or a formula designed to reduce the decedent's estate tax to 
zero), the assignment must specify that--
    (i) Assets actually transferred to the QDOT in satisfaction of the 
assignment have an aggregate fair market value on the date of actual 
transfer to the QDOT amounting to no less than the amount of the 
pecuniary transfer or assignment; or
    (ii) The assets actually transferred to the QDOT be fairly 
representative of appreciation or depreciation in the value of all 
property available for transfer to the QDOT between the valuation date 
and the date of actual transfer to the QDOT, if the assignment is to be 
satisfied by accounting for the assets on the basis of their fair market 
value as of some date before the date of actual transfer to the QDOT.
    (5) Transfer tax treatment of transfer or assignment. Property 
assigned or transferred to a QDOT pursuant to section 2056(d)(2)(B) is 
treated as passing from the decedent to a QDOT solely for purposes of 
section 2056(d)(2)(A). For all other purposes (e.g., income, gift, 
estate, generation-skipping transfer tax, and section 1491 excise tax), 
the surviving spouse is treated as the transferor of the property to the 
QDOT. However, the spouse is not considered the transferor of property 
to a QDOT if the transfer by the spouse constitutes a transfer that 
satisfies the requirements of section 2518(c)(3). For a special 
exception to the valuation rules of section 2702 in the case of a 
transfer by the surviving spouse to a QDOT, see Sec.  25.2702-1(c)(8) of 
this chapter.
    (6) Period for completion of transfer. Property irrevocably assigned 
but not actually transferred to the QDOT before the estate tax return is 
filed must actually be conveyed and transferred to the QDOT under 
applicable local law before the administration of the decedent's estate 
is completed. If there is no administration of the decedent's estate 
(because for example, none of the decedent's assets are subject to 
probate under local law), the conveyance must be made on or before the 
date that is one year after the due date (including extensions) for 
filing the decedent's estate tax return. If an actual transfer to the 
QDOT is not timely made, section 2056(d)(1)(A) applies and the marital 
deduction is not allowed. The executor of the decedent's estate (or 
other authorized legal representative) may request a private letter 
ruling from the Internal Revenue Service requesting an extension of the 
time for completing the conveyance or waiving the actual conveyance 
under specified circumstances under Sec.  301.9100-1(a) of this chapter.

[[Page 435]]

    (7) Retirement accounts and annuities--(i) In general. An assignment 
otherwise in compliance with this paragraph (b) of rights under 
annuities or other similar arrangements that are assignable and thus, 
are not described in paragraph (c) of this section, is treated as a 
transfer of such property to the QDOT regardless of the method of 
payment actually elected under such annuity or plan.
    (ii) Individual retirement annuities. Individual retirement 
annuities described in section 408(b) are not assignable pursuant to 
section 408(b)(1) and thus, do not come within the purview of this 
paragraph (b)(7). See the procedures provided in paragraph (c) of this 
section.
    (iii) Individual retirement accounts. Unless the terms of the 
account provide otherwise, individual retirement accounts described in 
section 408(a) are assignable and subject to the provisions of this 
paragraph (b)(7). However, under paragraph (c) of this section, the 
surviving spouse may treat an individual retirement account as 
nonassignable and, therefore, eligible for the procedures in paragraph 
(c) of this section if the spouse timely complies with the requirements 
in paragraph (c) of this section.
    (iv) Other effects of assignment. The provisions of this paragraph 
(b)(7) apply solely for purposes of qualifying the annuity or account 
under the rules of Sec.  20.2056A-2 and this section. See, for example, 
section 408(d) and 4980A regarding the consequences of an assignment for 
purposes other than this paragraph (b)(7).
    (8) Protective assignment. A protective assignment of property to a 
QDOT may be made only if, at the time the federal estate tax return is 
filed, the executor of the decedent's estate reasonably believes that 
there is a bona fide issue that concerns either the residency or 
citizenship of the decedent, the citizenship of the surviving spouse, 
whether all or a portion of an asset is includible in the decedent's 
gross estate, or the amount or nature of the property the surviving 
spouse is entitled to receive. For example, if at the time the federal 
estate tax return is filed, either the estate is involved in a bona fide 
will contest, there is uncertainty regarding the inclusion in the gross 
estate of an asset which, if includible, would be eligible for the QDOT 
election, or there is uncertainty regarding the status of the decedent 
as a resident alien or a nonresident alien for estate tax purposes, or a 
similar uncertainty regarding the citizenship status of the surviving 
spouse, a protective assignment may be made. The protective assignment 
must be made on a written statement signed by the assignor under 
penalties of perjury on or before the date prescribed under paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section, and must identify the specific assets to which 
the assignment refers and the specific basis for the protective 
assignment. However, the protective assignment may otherwise be defined 
by means of a formula (such as the minimum amount necessary to reduce 
the estate tax to zero). Once made, the protective assignment cannot be 
revoked. For example, if a protective assignment is made because a bona 
fide question exists as to the includibility of an asset in the 
decedent's gross estate and it is later finally determined that the 
asset is so includible, the protective assignment becomes effective with 
respect to the asset and cannot thereafter be revoked. Protective 
assignments are, in all events, subject to paragraph (b)(6) of this 
section. A copy of the protective assignment must be submitted with the 
decedent's estate tax return.
    (c) Nonassignable annuities and other arrangements--(1) Definition 
and general rule. For purposes of this section, a nonassignable annuity 
or other arrangement means a plan, annuity, or other arrangement 
(whether qualified or not qualified under part I of subchapter D of 
chapter 1 of subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code) that qualifies for 
the marital deduction but for section 2056(d)(1)(A), and whose payments 
are not assignable or transferable to the QDOT under either federal law 
(see, e.g., section 401(a)(13)), state law, foreign law, or the terms of 
the plan or arrangement itself. For purposes of this paragraph (c), a 
surviving spouse's interest as beneficiary of an individual retirement 
annuity described in section 408(b) is a nonassignable annuity or other 
arrangement. See section

[[Page 436]]

408(b)(1). For purposes of this paragraph (c), a surviving spouse's 
interest as beneficiary of an individual retirement account described in 
section 408(a), although assignable under that section, is considered to 
be a nonassignable annuity or other arrangement eligible for the 
procedures contained in this paragraph (c), at the option of the 
surviving spouse, if the requirements of this paragraph are otherwise 
satisfied. See paragraph (b)(7) of this section if the spouse elects to 
treat the account as assignable. In the case of a plan, annuity, or 
other arrangement which is not assignable or transferable (or is treated 
as such), the property passing under the plan from the decedent is 
treated as meeting the requirements Sec.  20.2056A-2, and the 
requirements of Sec.  20.2056A-2T(d) (pertaining, respectively, to 
general requirements, qualified marital interest requirements, statutory 
requirements, and requirements to ensure collection of the tax) if the 
requirements of either paragraph (c)(2) or (3) of this section are 
satisfied. Thus, the property will be treated as passing in the form of 
a QDOT, notwithstanding that the spouse does not irrevocably transfer or 
assign the annuity or other payment to the QDOT as provided in paragraph 
(b) of this section. The Commissioner will prescribe by administrative 
guidance the extent, if any, to which the provisions of this paragraph 
(c) apply to a rollover from a qualified trust to an eligible retirement 
plan within the meaning of section 402(c) or a distribution from an 
individual retirement account or an individual retirement annuity that 
is paid into an individual retirement account or an individual 
retirement annuity within the meaning of section 408(d)(3).
    (2) Agreement to remit section 2056A estate tax on corpus portion of 
each annuity payment. The requirements of this paragraph (c)(2) are 
satisfied if--
    (i) The noncitizen surviving spouse agrees to pay on an annual 
basis, as described in paragraph (c)(6)(i) of this section, the estate 
tax imposed under section 2056A(b)(1) due on the corpus portion, as 
defined in paragraph (c)(4) of this section, of each nonassignable 
annuity or other payment received under the plan or arrangement. 
However, for purposes of this paragraph (c)(2), if the financial 
circumstances of the spouse are such that an amount equal to all or a 
portion of the corpus portion of a nonassignable annuity payment 
received by the spouse would be subject to a hardship exemption (as 
defined in Sec.  20.2056A-5(c)) if paid from a QDOT, then all or a 
corresponding part of the corpus portion will be exempt from the tax 
payment requirement under this paragraph (c)(2);
    (ii) The executor of the decedent's estate files with the estate tax 
return the Information Statement described in paragraph (c)(5) of this 
section;
    (iii) The executor files with the estate tax return the Agreement To 
Pay Section 2056A Estate Tax described in paragraph (c)(6) of this 
section; and
    (iv) The executor makes the election under Sec.  20.2056A-3 with 
respect to the nonassignable annuity or other payment.
    (3) Agreement to roll over corpus portion of annuity payment to 
QDOT. The requirements of this paragraph (c)(3) are satisfied if--
    (i) The noncitizen surviving spouse agrees to roll over and 
transfer, within the time prescribed under paragraph (c)(7)(i) of this 
section, the corpus portion of each annuity payment to a QDOT, whether 
the QDOT is created by the decedent's will, the executor of the 
decedent's estate, or the surviving spouse. However, for purposes of 
this section, if the financial circumstances of the spouse are such that 
an amount equal to all or a portion of the corpus portion of a 
nonassignable annuity payment received by the spouse would be subject to 
a hardship exemption (as defined in Sec.  20.2056A-5(c)) if paid from a 
QDOT, then all or a corresponding part of the corpus portion will be 
exempt from the rollover requirement under this paragraph (c)(3);
    (ii) A QDOT for the benefit of the surviving spouse is established 
prior to the date that the estate tax return is filed and on or prior to 
the last date prescribed by law that the QDOT election may be made;
    (iii) The executor of the decedent's estate files with the estate 
tax return the Information Statement described in paragraph (c)(5) of 
this section;

[[Page 437]]

    (iv) The executor files with the estate tax return the Agreement To 
Roll Over Annuity Payments described in paragraph (c)(7) of this 
section; and
    (v) The executor makes the election under Sec.  20.2056A-3 with 
respect to the nonassignable annuity or other payment. See Sec.  
20.2056A-5(c)(3)(iv)(A), regarding distributions from the QDOT 
reimbursing the spouse for income taxes paid (either by actual payment 
or withholding) by the spouse with respect to amounts transferred to the 
QDOT pursuant to this paragraph (c)(3).
    (4) Determination of corpus portion--(i) Corpus portion. For 
purposes of this paragraph (c), the corpus portion of each nonassignable 
annuity or other payment is the corpus amount of the annual payment 
divided by the total annual payment.
    (ii) Corpus amount. (A) The corpus amount of the annual payment is 
determined in accordance with the following formula:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR22AU95.008

    (B) The total present value of the annuity or other payment is the 
present value of the nonassignable annuity or other payment as of the 
date of the decedent's death, determined in accordance with the interest 
rates and mortality data prescribed by section 7520. The expected 
annuity term is the number of years that would be required for the 
scheduled payments to exhaust a hypothetical fund equal to the present 
value of the scheduled payments. This is determined by first dividing 
the total present value of the payments by the annual payment. From the 
quotient so obtained, the expected annuity term is derived by 
identifying the term of years that corresponds to the annuity factor 
equal to the quotient. This is determined by using column 1 of Table B, 
for the applicable interest rate, contained in Publication 1457, Book 
Aleph. A copy of this publication may be purchased from the 
Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing Office, 
Washington, DC 20402. If the quotient obtained falls between two terms, 
the longer term is used.
    (5) Information Statement--(i) In general. In order for a 
nonassignable annuity or other payment described in this paragraph (c) 
to qualify under either paragraph (c) (2) or (3) of this section, the 
Information Statement described in paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this section 
must be filed with the decedent's federal estate tax return. The 
Information Statement must be signed under penalties of perjury by both 
the executor of the decedent's estate and by the surviving spouse of the 
decedent (or by the legal representative of the surviving spouse if the 
surviving spouse is legally incompetent to sign the statement). The 
Statement must contain all of the information prescribed by this 
paragraph (c)(5).
    (ii) Annuity source information--(A) Employment-related annuity. If 
the nonassignable annuity or other payment is employment-related, the 
following information must be provided--
    (1) The name and address of the employer;
    (2) The date of retirement or other separation from employment of 
the decedent;
    (3) The name and address of the pension fund, insurance company, or 
other obligor that is paying the annuity (or similar payment); and
    (4) The identification number, if any, that the obligor has assigned 
to the annuity or other payment.
    (B) Annuity not employment-related. If the nonassignable annuity or 
other payment is not employment-related, the following information must 
be provided--
    (1) The name and address of the person or entity paying the 
nonassignable annuity or other payment;

[[Page 438]]

    (2) The date of acquisition of the nonassignable annuity contract by 
the decedent or by the decedent and the surviving spouse; and
    (3) The identification number, if any, that the obligor has assigned 
to the nonassignable annuity or other payment.
    (iii) The total annuity amount payable each year. The total amount 
payable annually under the nonassignable annuity or other arrangement, 
including a description of whether the annuity is payable monthly, 
quarterly, or at some other interval, and a description of any scheduled 
changes in the annuity payout amount.
    (iv) The duration of the annuity. A description of the term of the 
nonassignable annuity or other payment in years, if it is determined by 
a term certain, and the name, address, and birthdate of any measuring 
life if the nonassignable annuity or other payment is determined by one 
or more lives.
    (v) The market interest rate under section 7520. The applicable 
interest rate as determined under section 7520.
    (vi) Determination of corpus portion of each payment (in accordance 
with paragraph (c)(4) of this section). The following items are required 
in order to determine the corpus portion of each payment--
    (A) The present value of the nonassignable annuity or other payment 
as of the decedent's death;
    (B) The expected annuity term;
    (C) The corpus amount of the annual annuity payments (paragraph 
(c)(5)(vi)(A) of this section divided by paragraph (c)(5)(vi)(B) of this 
section); and
    (D) The corpus portion of the annual payments (paragraph 
(c)(5)(vi)(C) of this section divided by the total amount payable 
annually).
    (vii) Recipient QDOT. In the case of an agreement to rollover under 
paragraph (c)(3) of this section, the following must be provided--
    (A) The name and address of the trustee of the QDOT who is the U.S. 
Trustee; and
    (B) The name and taxpayer identification number of the QDOT.
    (viii) Certification statement. The executor of the decedent's 
estate and the surviving spouse of the decedent (or the legal 
representative of the surviving spouse if the surviving spouse is 
legally incompetent to so certify) must each sign a Certification 
Statement as follows:

    Under penalties of perjury, I hereby certify that, to the best of my 
knowledge and belief, the information reported in this Information 
Statement is true, correct and complete.

    (6) Agreement to pay section 2056A estate tax--(i) Payment of 
section 2056A estate tax. The tax payable under paragraph (c)(2) of this 
section is payable on an annual basis, commencing in the calendar year 
following the calendar year of the receipt by the surviving spouse of 
the spouse's first annuity payment. Form 706QDT and the payment are due 
on April 15th of each year following the calendar year in which an 
annuity payment is received except that, in the year of the deceased 
spouse's death, the Form 706-QDT and the payment are not due prior to 
the due date, including extensions, for filing the deceased spouse's 
estate tax return, or if no return is filed, no later than 9 months from 
the date of the deceased spouse's death; and, in the year of the 
surviving spouse's death, the Form 706-QDT must be filed and the payment 
made no later than 9 months from the date of the surviving spouse's 
death. See Sec.  20.2056A-11 for extensions of time for filing Form 706-
QDT and paying the section 2056A estate tax.
    (ii) Agreement. In order for a nonassignable annuity or other 
payment described in this paragraph (c) to qualify under paragraph 
(c)(2) of this section, the executor of the decedent's estate must file 
with the estate tax return the following Agreement To Pay Section 2056A 
Estate Tax, which must be signed by the surviving spouse of the decedent 
(or by the surviving spouse's legal representative if the surviving 
spouse is legally incompetent to sign the agreement):

    I [ name ] hereby agree that I will report all annuity payments 
received under the [name of plan or arrangement] on Form 706-QDT for the 
calendar year and remit, on an annual basis, to the Internal Revenue 
Service the estate tax that is imposed under section 2056A(b)(1) of the 
Internal Revenue Code on the corpus portion of each annuity payment (as 
defined in Sec.  20.2056A-4(c)(4) of the

[[Page 439]]

Estate Tax Regulations) received under the plan during the calendar 
year. I also agree that Form 706-QDT is to be filed no later than April 
15th of the year following the calendar year in which any annuity 
payments are received except that: in the case of annuity payments 
received in the year of my spouse's death, Form 706-QDT and the payment 
shall not be due prior to the due date, including extensions, for filing 
my spouse's estate tax return or, if no return is filed, no later than 9 
months from the date of my spouse's death (except if I am granted an 
extension of time to file Form 706-QDT under the provisions of Sec.  
20.2056A-11); and in the year of my death, the Form 706-QDT must be 
filed and the payment made no later than the date my estate tax return 
is filed (or if no return is filed, no later than 9 months from the date 
of my death). I further agree that if I fail to timely file Form 706-QDT 
or to timely pay the tax imposed on the corpus portion of any annuity 
payment (determined after any extensions of time to pay granted to me 
under the provisions of Sec.  20.2056A- 11), I may become immediately 
liable to pay the amount of the tax determined by application of section 
2056A(b)(1) on the entire remaining present value of the annuity, 
calculated as of the beginning of the year in which the payment was 
received with respect to which I failed to timely pay the tax or failed 
to timely file the return. However, I may make an application for relief 
under Sec.  301.9100-1 of the Procedure and Administration Regulations, 
from the consequences of failing to timely file the Form 706-QDT or 
failing to timely pay the tax on the corpus portion. [The following 
sentence is applicable only in cases where the plan or arrangement is 
established and administered by a person or an entity that is located 
outside of the United States.] I agree, at the request of the District 
Director, [or the Assistant Commissioner (International) in the case of 
a surviving spouse of a nonresident noncitizen decedent or a surviving 
spouse of a United States citizen who died domiciled outside the United 
States] to enter into a security agreement to secure my undertakings 
under this agreement.
    (7) Agreement to roll over annuity payments--(i) Roll over of corpus 
portion. Beginning in the calendar year of the receipt by the surviving 
spouse of the spouse's first annuity payment, the corpus portion of each 
annuity payment, as determined under paragraph (c)(4) of this section, 
must, within 60 days of receipt, be transferred to a QDOT. In addition, 
all annuity payments received during the calendar year must be reported 
on Form 706-QDT no later than April 15th of the year following the year 
in which the annuity payments are received, except that in the year of 
the surviving spouse's death, the Form 706-QDT must be filed no later 
than the date the estate tax return is filed (or if no return is filed, 
no later than 9 months from the date of the surviving spouse's death). 
See Sec.  20.2056A-11 for extensions of time for filing Form 706-QDT.
    (ii) Agreement. In order for a nonassignable annuity or other 
payment described in this paragraph (c) to qualify under paragraph 
(c)(3) of this section, the executor of the decedent's estate must file 
with the estate tax return the following Agreement To Roll Over Annuity 
Payments, which must be signed by the surviving spouse of the decedent 
(or by the legal representative of the surviving spouse if the surviving 
spouse is legally incompetent to sign the agreement):

    I [ name ] hereby agree that within 60 days of receipt of each 
annuity payment paid under the [name of plan or arrangement], I will 
transfer an amount equal to ------ percent (the corpus portion 
determined under Sec.  20.2056A-4(c)(4) of the Estate Tax Regulations) 
of each annuity payment to [identify the QDOT]. Further, I will report 
all annuity payments received during the calendar year under the [name 
of plan or arrangement] on Form 706-QDT including a schedule of 
transfers to the [identify the QDOT]. I also agree that Form 706-QDT is 
to be filed no later than April 15th of the year following the year in 
which any annuity payments are received except that: in the case of 
annuity payments received in the year of my spouse's death, Form 706-QDT 
shall not be due prior to the due date, including extensions, for filing 
my spouse's estate tax return, or, if no return is filed, no later than 
9 months from the date of my spouse's death (except if I am granted an 
extension of time to file Form 706-QDT under the provisions of Sec.  
20.2056A-11); and in the year of my death, the Form 706-QDT must be 
filed no later than the date my estate tax return is filed (or if no 
return is filed, no later than 9 months from the date of my death), and 
except if I am granted an extension of time to file Form 706-QDT under 
the provisions of Sec.  20.2056A-11. I further agree that if I fail to 
timely transfer any required amount with respect to any annuity payment, 
or fail to timely file Form 706-QDT reporting the transfers for any 
year, I may become immediately liable to pay the amount of the tax 
determined by application of section 2056A(b)(1) on the entire remaining 
present value of the annuity, calculated as of the beginning of the year 
in which the payment was received with respect to which I

[[Page 440]]

failed to make the timely transfer or timely file a return. However, I 
may make an application for relief under Sec.  301.9100-1 of the 
Procedure and Administration Regulations, from the consequences of 
failing to timely file Form 706-QDT or failing to timely transfer the 
corpus portion of any annuity payment to the QDOT. [The following 
sentence is applicable only in cases where the plan or arrangement is 
established and administered by a person or an entity that is located 
outside of the United States.] I agree, at the request of the District 
Director [or the Assistant Commissioner (International) in the case of a 
surviving spouse of a nonresident noncitizen decedent or a surviving 
spouse of a United States citizen who died domiciled outside the United 
States] to enter into a security agreement to secure my undertakings 
under this agreement.

    (d) Examples. The provisions of this section are illustrated by the 
following examples. In each of the following examples the decedent, D, a 
citizen of the United States, died after August 22, 1995, and D's 
surviving spouse, S, is not a United States citizen at the time of D's 
death.

    Example 1. Transfer and assignment of probate and nonprobate 
property to QDOT. (i) S is the beneficiary of the following probate and 
nonprobate assets included in D's gross estate:

Pecuniary bequest under will...............................     $400,000
Proceeds of life insurance.................................      200,000
D's interest in property owned jointly with S includible in      300,000
 the gross estate under Sec.  2040(a).....................
Devise of real property under will.........................      100,000
                                                            ------------
    Total..................................................   $1,000,000


    (ii) Before the estate tax return for D's estate is filed and before 
the date that the QDOT election must be made, S creates a QDOT pursuant 
to which all income is payable to S for life and the remainder is 
distributable to S's children. S retains a power of appointment over the 
disposition of the remainder to ensure that S does not make an immediate 
gift of the remainder of the trust. Also, before the estate tax return 
is filed and before the date that the QDOT election must be made, S 
transfers the life insurance proceeds and the specifically devised real 
property to the QDOT. S decides not to transfer the property that had 
been jointly owned to the QDOT. Because S has not received distribution 
of the pecuniary bequest before D's estate tax return is filed and 
before the date that the QDOT election must be made, S irrevocably 
assigns the interest in the pecuniary bequest to the QDOT. Assume that 
the pecuniary bequest is in fact transferred by S to the QDOT before the 
estate administration is concluded. D's executor makes a QDOT election 
on the estate tax return for the $700,000 in property that S has 
transferred and assigned to the QDOT. A marital deduction of $700,000 is 
allowed to D's estate assuming the estate tax return is filed and the 
QDOT election is made within the time limitation prescribed in Sec.  
20.2056A-3(a). No marital deduction is allowed for the $300,000 interest 
in jointly-owned property not transferred to the QDOT.
    Example 2. Formula assignment. Under the terms of D's will, the 
entire probate estate passes outright to S. Prior to the date D's estate 
tax return is filed and before the date that the QDOT election must be 
made, S establishes a QDOT and S executes an irrevocable assignment in 
which S assigns to the QDOT, ``that portion of the gross estate 
necessary to reduce the estate tax to zero, taking into account all 
available credits and deductions.'' The assignment meets the 
requirements of paragraph (b) of this section, assuming that the QDOT is 
funded by the time that administration of D's estate is completed.
    Example 3. Jointly owned property. At the time of D's death, D and S 
hold real property as joint tenants with right of survivorship. In 
accordance with section 2056(d)(1)(B), section 2040(a), and Sec.  
20.2056A-8(a), 60 percent of the value of the property is included in 
D's gross estate. S establishes a QDOT and, prior to the date the estate 
tax return is filed and before the date that the QDOT election must be 
made, S transfers a 60 percent interest in the real property to the 
QDOT. The transfer satisfies the requirements of paragraph (b) of this 
section.
    Example 4. Computation of corpus portion of annuity payment. (i) At 
the time of D's death, D is a participant in an employees' pension plan 
described in section 401(a). On D's death, D's spouse S, a resident of 
the United States, becomes entitled to receive a survivor's annuity of 
$72,000 per year, payable monthly, for life. At the time of D's death, S 
is age 60. Assume that under section 7520, the appropriate discount rate 
to be used for valuing annuities in the case of this decedent is 9 
percent. The annuity factor at 9 percent for a person age 60 is 8.3031. 
The adjustment factor at 9 percent for monthly payments is 1.0406. 
Accordingly, the right to receive $72,000 a year on a monthly basis is 
equal to the right to receive $74,923 ($72,000 x 1.0406) on an annual 
basis.
    (ii) The corpus portion of each annuity payment received by S is 
determined as follows. The first step is to determine the annuity factor 
for the number of years that would be required to exhaust a hypothetical 
fund that has a present value and a payout corresponding to S's interest 
in the payments under the plan, determined as follows:

(A) Present value of S's annuity: $74,923x8.3031 = $622,093
(B) Annuity Factor for Expected Annuity Term: $622,093/$74,923 = 8.3031


[[Page 441]]


    (iii) The second step is to determine the number of years that would 
be required for S's annuity to exhaust a hypothetical fund of $622,093. 
The term certain annuity factor of 8.3031 falls between the annuity 
factors for 15 and 16 years in a 9 percent term certain annuity table 
(Column 1 of Table B, Publication 1457 Book Aleph which may be purchased 
from the Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing 
Office, Washington, DC 20402). Accordingly, the expected annuity term is 
16 years.
    (iv) The third step is to determine the corpus amount by dividing 
the expected term of 16 years into the present value of the hypothetical 
fund as follows:

Corpus amount of annual payment: $622,093/16 = $38,881

    (v) In the fourth step, the corpus portion of each annuity payment 
is determined by dividing the corpus amount of each annual payment by 
the annual annuity payment as follows:

Corpus portion of each annuity payment: $38,881/$74,923 = .52

    (vi) Accordingly, 52 percent of each payment to S is deemed to be a 
distribution of corpus. A marital deduction is allowed for $622,093, the 
present value of the annuity as of D's date of death, if either: S 
agrees to roll over the corpus portion of each payment to a QDOT and the 
executor files the Information Statement described in paragraph (c)(5) 
of this section and the Roll Over Agreement described in paragraph 
(c)(7) of this section; or S agrees to pay the tax due on the corpus 
portion of each payment and the executor files the Information Statement 
described in paragraph (c)(5) of this section and the Payment Agreement 
described in paragraph (c)(6) of this section.
    Example 5. Transfer to QDOT subject to gift tax. D's will bequeaths 
$700,000 outright to S. The bequest qualifies for a marital deduction 
under section 2056(a) except that it does not pass in a QDOT. S creates 
an irrevocable trust that meets the requirements for a QDOT and 
transfers the $700,000 to the QDOT. The QDOT instrument provides that S 
is entitled to all the income from the QDOT payable at least annually 
and that, upon the death of S, the property remaining in the QDOT is to 
be distributed to the grandchildren of D and S in equal shares. The 
trust instrument contains all other provisions required to qualify as a 
QDOT. On D's estate tax return, D's executor makes a QDOT election under 
section 2056A(a)(3). Solely for purposes of the marital deduction, the 
property is deemed to pass from D to the QDOT. D's estate is entitled to 
a marital deduction for the $700,000 value of the property passing from 
D to S. S's transfer of property to the QDOT is treated as a gift of the 
remainder interest for gift tax purposes because S's transfer creates a 
vested remainder interest in the grandchildren of D and S. Accordingly, 
as of the date that S transfers the property to the QDOT, a gift tax is 
imposed on the present value of the remainder interest. See Sec.  
25.2702-1(c)(8) of this chapter exempting S's transfer from the special 
valuation rules contained in section 2702. At S's death, S is treated as 
the transferor of the property into the trust for estate tax and 
generation-skipping transfer tax purposes. See, e.g., sections 2036 and 
2652(a)(1). The trust is not eligible for a reverse QTIP election by D's 
estate under section 2652(a)(3) because a QTIP election cannot be made 
for the QDOT. This is so because the marital deduction is allowed under 
section 2056(a) for the outright bequest to the spouse and the spouse is 
then separately treated as the transferor of the property to the QDOT.

[T.D. 8612, 60 FR 43541, Aug. 22, 1995, as amended by T.D. 8819, 64 FR 
23229, Apr. 30, 1999; 64 FR 33196, June 22, 1999]