Table of Contents
- What Is an Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust?
- Why "Defective" Is Actually the Point
- The Installment Sale Mechanics Step-by-Step
- The Math: How Much You Transfer Tax-Free
- The Seed Gift Requirement
- The Promissory Note and AFR
- IDGT vs GRAT: Which Is Better for Bitcoin?
- Wyoming as the Optimal IDGT Situs
- Bitcoin-Specific Considerations
- Risks, Limitations, and IRS Scrutiny
- Who Should Use This Strategy
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Is an Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust?
An Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust is an irrevocable trust that exploits a fundamental disconnect in the US tax code: the income tax rules and the estate tax rules treat the same trust differently.
Under the income tax grantor trust rules (IRC Sections 671-679), a trust is a "grantor trust" if the grantor retains certain powers or interests — and a grantor trust is taxed as if the grantor owned the assets directly. The grantor reports all trust income on their personal tax return and pays the tax.
Under the estate tax rules, a properly structured IDGT is not included in the grantor's estate. The trust assets pass outside the taxable estate.
This creates the "intentional defect": the trust is deliberately designed to trigger grantor trust status for income tax purposes (making the grantor pay all the income tax) while simultaneously keeping the assets out of the estate. The income tax "defect" — paying tax on someone else's income — is actually a feature, not a bug.
Common Powers That Create Grantor Trust Status
Estate planners typically include one or more of the following powers to create grantor trust status without causing estate inclusion:
- Power to substitute assets: The grantor retains the right to substitute assets of equivalent value into the trust — keeping assets out of the estate while creating grantor trust status (IRC Section 675(4)(C))
- Power to borrow without adequate interest: The grantor can borrow from the trust without adequate interest or adequate security — creates grantor trust status but not estate inclusion if structured correctly
- Spouse as beneficiary: If the grantor's spouse is a permissible beneficiary, the trust income is taxable to the grantor under IRC Section 677
- Power to add beneficiaries: The grantor retains the power to add charitable beneficiaries — a limited power that does not cause estate inclusion but creates grantor trust status
The most common approach: the grantor retains the power to substitute assets of equivalent value (the "swap power"). This is clean, clearly established in IRS rulings, and does not cause estate inclusion.
Why "Defective" Is Actually the Point
The grantor's payment of income tax on IDGT earnings is one of the strategy's most powerful hidden benefits — and the reason some practitioners prefer IDGT installment sales to GRATs for Bitcoin.
Here is why: every dollar the grantor pays in income tax on behalf of the trust is an additional transfer of wealth to the trust beneficiaries, free of gift tax. The IRS has ruled (Revenue Ruling 2004-64) that a grantor's payment of income tax on grantor trust income is not a taxable gift.
Over a multi-decade trust term, this additional estate reduction from grantor income tax payments can be substantial — often exceeding the appreciation on the Bitcoin itself for tax-efficient Bitcoin mining operations that generate significant ordinary income.
The Installment Sale Mechanics Step-by-Step
Here is exactly how a Bitcoin IDGT installment sale is structured:
Step 1: Establish the IDGT
Work with an estate planning attorney to draft an irrevocable trust agreement that (a) includes grantor trust powers for income tax purposes, (b) excludes any powers that would cause estate inclusion, (c) names the desired beneficiaries (children, grandchildren, dynasty structure), and (d) designates the trust situs (Wyoming strongly recommended for Bitcoin).
Step 2: Fund the Trust with Seed Capital
Gift 10-20% of the anticipated sale price into the trust as initial seed capital. This is a taxable gift that consumes lifetime gift tax exemption. The seed capital gives the trust sufficient economic substance to be a genuine buyer — the IRS looks for this to ensure the sale is not a disguised gift. For a $5 million Bitcoin sale, seed the trust with $500,000 to $1 million.
Step 3: Obtain a Qualified Appraisal of the Bitcoin
Bitcoin's value is readily determinable from exchange pricing — a contemporaneous print of the spot price from a major exchange on the date of sale is typically sufficient. For large positions, use the average of the high and low prices on the transfer date, which is the same method used for public securities.
Step 4: Execute the Sale
Transfer the Bitcoin to the IDGT in exchange for a promissory note equal to 100% of the Bitcoin's fair market value. The note must:
- Bear interest at or above the Applicable Federal Rate (AFR) for the relevant term
- Have adequate security (the trust's assets serve as collateral)
- Have a defined maturity date or balloon structure
- Be documented with a formal promissory note executed contemporaneously with the transfer
Step 5: Trust Pays Note; Bitcoin Appreciates
The IDGT makes periodic interest payments to the grantor at the AFR. If structured as an interest-only note with a balloon, the principal is repaid at maturity. Meanwhile, the Bitcoin inside the trust appreciates. All appreciation above the AFR interest rate accrues to the trust beneficiaries — outside both gift tax and estate tax.
Step 6: Grantor Pays Income Tax on Trust Earnings
Because the IDGT is a grantor trust for income tax, the grantor pays income tax on all trust income — including any Bitcoin gains realized inside the trust. This is an additional estate reduction with no gift tax consequence.
Step 7: Note Repaid; Trust Continues
When the note matures, the trust repays the principal from trust assets (Bitcoin or other assets). The grantor receives cash or property equal to the original sale price. The trust retains all appreciation — permanently outside the estate.
The Math: How Much You Transfer Tax-Free
The economic benefit of an IDGT installment sale depends on the spread between Bitcoin's actual appreciation and the AFR interest rate on the note. Here is a concrete illustration:
| Assumption | Value |
|---|---|
| Bitcoin sold to IDGT | $5,000,000 (at date of sale) |
| Note term | 9 years (mid-term AFR) |
| AFR interest rate | 4.5% annually (illustrative) |
| Bitcoin annual appreciation | 20% (conservative long-term estimate) |
| Note structure | Interest-only; balloon at year 9 |
Without the IDGT, the $25.8 million Bitcoin would be in the grantor's taxable estate, subject to 40% estate tax above the exemption — a potential $10+ million estate tax bill. The IDGT installment sale eliminates that liability on all appreciation above the AFR, permanently.
Sensitivity to Bitcoin Appreciation Rate
| Bitcoin Annual Growth | Trust Value at Year 9 (on $5M sold) | Net Transfer After Note Repayment | Estate Tax Saved |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | ~$11,800,000 | ~$6,800,000 | ~$2,720,000 |
| 15% | ~$17,500,000 | ~$12,500,000 | ~$5,000,000 |
| 20% | ~$25,800,000 | ~$20,800,000 | ~$8,320,000 |
| 30% | ~$55,100,000 | ~$50,100,000 | ~$20,040,000 |
| 50% | ~$192,000,000 | ~$187,000,000 | ~$74,800,000 |
At Bitcoin's historical appreciation rates, the IDGT installment sale is extraordinarily efficient — potentially transferring $50-200 million per $5 million sold, with zero gift or estate tax on the appreciation.
The Seed Gift Requirement
The IDGT must have initial capital — called the "seed gift" — before or at the time of the installment sale. Without adequate seed capital, the IRS may argue that the trust lacks economic substance and that the "sale" is actually a disguised gift.
How Much Seed Capital Is Required?
There is no statutory rule on the required seed gift amount. The generally accepted practice is 10% of the sale price, though some practitioners use 7-10% for very large transactions and up to 20% for transactions where additional risk protection is desired.
| Bitcoin Sale Amount | Recommended Seed Gift (10%) | Exemption Consumed | Approximate Remaining Exemption |
|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000,000 | $100,000 | $100,000 | ~$13,510,000 |
| $5,000,000 | $500,000 | $500,000 | ~$13,110,000 |
| $10,000,000 | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | ~$12,610,000 |
| $20,000,000 | $2,000,000 | $2,000,000 | ~$11,610,000 |
| $50,000,000 | $5,000,000 | $5,000,000 | ~$8,610,000 |
The seed gift uses lifetime exemption but does not trigger immediate gift tax until the exemption is exhausted. For most Bitcoin holders with positions under $130 million, the seed gift can be structured to stay within exemption limits.
The Promissory Note and AFR
The promissory note is the heart of the IDGT installment sale. It must meet IRS requirements to avoid being characterized as a gift:
Applicable Federal Rate (AFR)
The IRS publishes the AFR monthly in Revenue Rulings. The rate varies by note term:
- Short-term AFR (up to 3 years): Based on 3-year Treasury rate
- Mid-term AFR (3-9 years): Based on 3-7 year Treasury rate — commonly used for IDGT notes
- Long-term AFR (over 9 years): Based on long-term Treasury rate — useful for dynasty trust structures
The note must bear interest at or above the AFR for the applicable term. Lower AFR rates make the strategy more powerful — more Bitcoin appreciation escapes taxation above a lower hurdle rate. When the Federal Reserve cuts rates and AFRs fall, IDGT installment sales become dramatically more efficient.
Note Structures
| Structure | Description | Trust Cash Flow | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest-only with balloon | Trust pays interest annually; principal due at maturity | Lower annual payments; large balloon | Bitcoin that doesn't generate income; maximizes trust appreciation |
| Fully amortizing | Fixed principal + interest payments over term | Higher annual payments; no balloon | Trust has income to service debt (mining income, staking) |
| Self-canceling installment note (SCIN) | Note cancels at grantor's death; premium above AFR | Higher interest rate; cancels if grantor dies | Grantor with shortened life expectancy; eliminates note from estate |
Self-Canceling Installment Notes (SCIN) for Bitcoin
A SCIN is a variant where the note automatically cancels upon the grantor's death. The trust pays no estate tax on the cancelled debt because it is extinguished. To compensate for this mortality risk, the note carries a higher interest rate or a risk premium on the principal. SCINs are particularly useful when the grantor has a below-average life expectancy. The SCIN premium itself is not a gift if properly structured based on actuarial tables.
IDGT vs GRAT: Which Is Better for Bitcoin?
Both GRATs and IDGT installment sales are powerful estate planning tools for appreciating assets. For Bitcoin specifically, each has distinct advantages:
| Feature | GRAT | IDGT Installment Sale |
|---|---|---|
| Gift tax on setup | Zero (if zeroed-out GRAT) | Only on seed gift (10-20% of sale) |
| Death during term | Assets return to estate -- strategy fails | Note remains outstanding; no estate pullback of sold assets |
| Trust duration | Fixed term (2-5 years typical); must re-GRAT after | Indefinite; assets stay in trust permanently (dynasty trust) |
| Hurdle rate | Section 7520 rate (typically higher than AFR) | AFR (typically lower than 7520 rate) |
| Grantor income tax benefit | Yes -- grantor pays trust's income tax | Yes -- grantor pays trust's income tax |
| Asset substitution | Generally not available | Yes -- grantor can swap assets of equal value |
| Best market for Bitcoin | Rising prices (higher annuity payments manageable) | Any environment -- note can be refinanced if needed |
| Congressional risk | Proposed legislation has targeted GRATs (minimum term, zeroed-out restrictions) | Somewhat less targeted; but still on legislative radar |
| Ideal use case | Short-term transfer of specific Bitcoin position during price surge | Long-term dynasty trust structure for large Bitcoin positions |
For most Bitcoin family office situations, the IDGT installment sale is the preferred structure for large positions because (1) it works with dynasty trusts for perpetual duration, (2) the grantor does not face re-GRAT risk if they die during the term, and (3) the AFR hurdle is typically lower than the GRAT Section 7520 hurdle.
Wyoming as the Optimal IDGT Situs
The choice of trust situs is critical for a Bitcoin IDGT. Wyoming stands out as the preferred jurisdiction for several compounding reasons:
No Rule Against Perpetuities
Wyoming abolished the Rule Against Perpetuities, allowing trusts to last indefinitely. This is essential for dynasty trust structures: the Bitcoin can remain in the IDGT for generations, compounding tax-free, with no forced distribution date.
Wyoming Digital Asset Statute
Wyoming has enacted explicit statutory authority for fiduciaries to hold and manage digital assets (Wyoming Stat. Section 2-3-201 et seq.). A Wyoming trustee has clear legal authority to custody Bitcoin, execute transactions, and manage private keys — reducing legal ambiguity for trustees who might otherwise be cautious about holding digital assets.
Directed Trust Statute
Wyoming's directed trust statute allows the grantor to separate the investment management function (Bitcoin custody decisions) from the administrative trustee function. This means a specialized Bitcoin custody firm can manage the private keys and investment decisions while a traditional corporate trustee handles administrative duties. This structure provides optimal expertise at each function without requiring a single trustee to be expert in both Bitcoin and trust administration.
Charging Order Exclusivity
Wyoming provides strong protection: creditors of a trust beneficiary generally cannot reach trust assets directly, but can only obtain a "charging order" (the right to receive distributions when made, not to force a sale). This creditor protection benefit extends to Bitcoin held inside the Wyoming IDGT.
No State Income Tax
Wyoming has no state income tax. Trust income — including Bitcoin appreciation — is not subject to Wyoming state income tax. For a dynasty trust that may hold Bitcoin for decades, this saves potentially millions in state taxes compared to trusts in California (13.3% top rate), New York (10.9%), or other high-tax states.
Bitcoin-Specific Considerations
Valuation at Sale Date
Bitcoin's value must be established at the time of the installment sale. Use the average of the high and low prices on the sale date from a major exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini) as the fair market value. Document this in the trust records and retain contemporaneous screenshots. For very large positions (100+ BTC), consider a formal appraisal from a qualified appraiser who specializes in digital assets.
Custody Inside the IDGT
The Bitcoin transferred to the IDGT must be held by or on behalf of the trust — not by the grantor personally. Options include:
- Multi-signature wallet where the trustee(s) control keys and the grantor does not (maintaining separation)
- Qualified custodian holding Bitcoin on behalf of the trust
- Directed trust arrangement where an investment director holds keys under direction from the trust document
The grantor retaining sole control over Bitcoin private keys after the "sale" would undermine the independence of the transaction and potentially cause estate inclusion.
The Swap Power and Bitcoin
The grantor's retained power to substitute assets of equivalent value (the swap power) is particularly useful with Bitcoin. If the grantor believes Bitcoin at a specific time has reached a local price peak, they can swap lower-basis assets into the trust in exchange for the Bitcoin — locking in the Bitcoin appreciation inside the trust while giving the grantor assets that may have lower estate tax exposure. This flexibility is unique to IDGT structures.
Mining Income Inside the IDGT
If the IDGT holds Bitcoin mining infrastructure (or interests in a mining company like Abundant Mines), the mining income is taxed to the grantor as ordinary income. This creates an additional estate reduction mechanism: the grantor pays income tax on mining income, reducing their estate while allowing the trust to accumulate Bitcoin proceeds without the income tax drain. The combination of mining income taxation at the grantor level and Bitcoin appreciation inside the trust makes a Bitcoin mining IDGT structure particularly powerful.
Risks, Limitations, and IRS Scrutiny
Step Transaction Risk
If the sale and the establishment of the trust are viewed as a single integrated transaction (the "step transaction doctrine"), the IRS might recharacterize the entire arrangement as a gift. Avoid this by seeding the trust well in advance of the sale — ideally at least a few months — and having the trust engage in other activity before the Bitcoin sale occurs.
Adequate Consideration Challenge
The IRS could argue the note does not represent adequate consideration if the AFR rate is so low that no arm's-length buyer would lend at that rate. This risk is mitigated by using the published AFR (which is a safe harbor) and by ensuring the trust has sufficient seed capital to be a credible counterparty.
Estate Inclusion Risk
If the grantor retained powers that cause estate inclusion (powers over beneficial enjoyment, reversionary interests, etc.), the Bitcoin in the IDGT would be pulled back into the taxable estate. Careful drafting by an experienced estate planning attorney eliminates this risk — but it requires precision.
Legislative Risk
Congress has periodically proposed legislation targeting grantor trust strategies, including minimum GRAT terms and restrictions on certain grantor trust powers. While IDGT installment sales have not been specifically targeted as frequently as GRATs, any significant tax reform could alter the landscape. The strategy should be implemented now while the current rules remain favorable.
Bitcoin Price Decline
If Bitcoin drops significantly after the sale, the IDGT holds an asset worth less than the promissory note balance. The trust is effectively insolvent (cannot repay the note from Bitcoin alone). Mitigation strategies include: (1) seeding the trust with additional assets that can service the note; (2) refinancing the note if rates allow; or (3) accepting partial repayment. Importantly, even a failed IDGT (where Bitcoin dropped) does not create a taxable gift — the grantor simply holds a note that may not be fully collectible.
Who Should Use This Strategy
The IDGT installment sale is the right tool when:
- Bitcoin position is $1 million or larger: Below this threshold, simpler strategies (annual gifts, irrevocable trusts with direct gifts) may be more cost-effective relative to attorney fees
- Grantor has significant remaining lifetime exemption: The seed gift requires exemption; grantor should have at least $500K-1M in remaining exemption
- Grantor expects to outlive the note term: If the grantor has a shortened life expectancy, a SCIN (self-canceling installment note) variant may be preferable
- Bitcoin expected to appreciate substantially above the AFR: The strategy's power comes from the spread between appreciation and the AFR hurdle; it is less efficient in low-appreciation environments
- Dynasty trust planning is desired: For multi-generational Bitcoin transfer, the IDGT installment sale into a Wyoming dynasty trust is the most efficient vehicle available
- Grantor can absorb income tax payments on trust earnings: If the trust generates significant income, the grantor must be able to pay those taxes from outside funds
| Profile | IDGT Installment Sale Appropriate? | Better Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin holder, $500K position, age 40 | Possibly -- evaluate with attorney | Direct gift to irrevocable trust; GRAT |
| Bitcoin holder, $5M+ position, age 50-65 | Yes -- prime candidate | N/A -- this is the optimal strategy |
| Bitcoin holder, $50M+ position, any age | Yes -- combine with GRAT, SLAT, CRT for full optimization | N/A -- multiple strategies simultaneously |
| Bitcoin IRA holder | No -- IRA assets cannot be sold to an IDGT (prohibited transaction) | Roth conversion; inherited IRA planning |
| Non-resident alien Bitcoin holder | Consult US international tax attorney -- complex interaction with NRA rules | Foreign corporation; foreign grantor trust |
The Multi-Strategy Approach for Large Bitcoin Holders
For Bitcoin holders with positions above $10 million, the IDGT installment sale is rarely used in isolation. It is typically combined with complementary strategies to achieve maximum transfer efficiency:
- IDGT installment sale + GRAT: Use a GRAT for immediate price-surge windows (short-term, zeroed-out annuity) and an IDGT for the long-term dynasty structure
- IDGT + SLAT: A Spousal Lifetime Access Trust provides the grantor's spouse with access to trust assets during the grantor's lifetime — adding a safety net while still removing Bitcoin from the estate
- IDGT + Charitable Remainder Trust: Allocate Traditional IRA Bitcoin to a CRT (no income tax on distribution) and directly-held Bitcoin to the IDGT for capital gains optimization
- IDGT + Generation Skipping Trust: Structure the IDGT as a dynasty GST trust to skip the estate tax at the children's generation as well as the grantor's generation
An experienced Bitcoin estate planning attorney will model multiple strategies simultaneously, selecting the optimal combination based on the grantor's health, remaining exemption, Bitcoin position size, income needs, and generational transfer goals.
For related strategies, see our guides on Bitcoin GRAT strategy, Bitcoin dynasty trusts, Bitcoin SLAT planning, Bitcoin generation skipping trust, Wyoming trust and LLC structures, and comprehensive Bitcoin estate planning.
This guide is updated regularly to reflect changes in AFR rates, IRS guidance on grantor trusts, and legislative developments affecting IDGT strategies. Last updated: February 2026. This is not legal, tax, or financial advice. IDGT installment sales require qualified legal and tax counsel for proper implementation.
Frequently Asked Questions
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