Most wealthy families think about transferring Bitcoin in two ways: giving it as a gift or leaving it in an estate. Both are subject to gift and estate tax once cumulative transfers exceed the lifetime exemption. There is a third path that most families overlook — and in a rising-rate, high-appreciation environment, it may be the most efficient of all.

The intra-family loan: you lend cash to your child, trust, or family entity at the IRS-minimum Applicable Federal Rate (AFR). The borrower invests that cash in Bitcoin. Any appreciation above the AFR rate passes to the next generation entirely outside the transfer tax system — no gift tax, no estate tax, no reporting. The interest you receive back is ordinary income, but the appreciation (potentially 10x, 20x, 50x over a Bitcoin cycle) never touches your taxable estate.

This is the §7872 rate arbitrage, and it has powered some of the most significant intergenerational wealth transfers in American history. Bitcoin's asymmetric return profile makes it particularly suited to this structure.

The Core Mechanic: IRC §7872 requires that loans between related parties charge at least the Applicable Federal Rate (AFR) — the IRS's minimum interest rate published monthly. Lend at or above AFR, and the transaction is treated as a bona fide loan. Any economic return above the AFR rate that the borrower earns belongs to the borrower — outside the gift and estate tax framework entirely.

The Applicable Federal Rate (AFR): What It Is and How to Use It

The IRS publishes AFR rates monthly in Revenue Rulings. There are three tiers based on loan term:

Loan Term Rate Tier Approx. 2026 Range Compounding
3 years or less Short-term AFR 4.2–4.8% Annual, semi-annual, quarterly, or monthly
3–9 years Mid-term AFR 4.0–4.5% Annual, semi-annual, quarterly, or monthly
Over 9 years Long-term AFR 4.4–4.8% Annual, semi-annual, quarterly, or monthly

The AFR is locked in at the time the loan is made and applies for the life of the loan. This is strategically significant: a loan made in a month when rates are temporarily lower locks in that rate for the full term. Estate attorneys closely track monthly AFR publications precisely for this reason.

For Bitcoin planning, the long-term AFR (loans over 9 years) is typically used — it is often slightly lower than the short-term rate, it provides maximum time for Bitcoin appreciation to compound, and it is most useful for genuine multigenerational planning. At approximately 4.4–4.8% in 2026, a 10-year loan allows the borrower to keep all Bitcoin appreciation above ~4.5% annually — entirely tax-free to the lender-parent.

The $10,000 and $100,000 Exceptions

IRC §7872 contains two important exceptions that reduce compliance burden for smaller loans:

For serious Bitcoin wealth transfer, the loan size will typically be well above $100,000, so the full §7872 rules apply.

How the Estate Freeze Works: The Math

Here is the core calculation for a $1,000,000 intra-family loan used to purchase Bitcoin, at a 4.5% long-term AFR over 10 years, with Bitcoin appreciating at an assumed 25% annually (conservative by Bitcoin's historical average):

Item Amount Transfer Tax Treatment
Loan principal lent to child/trust $1,000,000 Not a gift — loan, must be repaid
Total interest owed (4.5% over 10yr, annual payments) ~$450,000 Ordinary income to lender (parent); deductible to borrower if investment use
Bitcoin value at end of 10 years (25%/yr) ~$9,313,000
Less: loan repayment ($1,000,000) Returns to parent estate — no transfer tax
Net appreciation transferred to child/trust ~$8,313,000 Zero gift tax. Zero estate tax. Completely outside transfer tax system.
Gift/estate tax cost of this transfer $0 vs. $3,490,600 (40% estate tax on $8.73M above exemption)

$8.3 million transferred to the next generation in exchange for $450,000 of interest income to the parent — and zero gift or estate tax on the appreciation. This is the power of rate arbitrage when paired with a high-appreciation asset like Bitcoin.

The key insight: the transfer tax system only sees the loan and the interest. The appreciation above the AFR rate is economically invisible to the IRS's transfer tax apparatus — it belongs to the borrower by virtue of owning the asset that appreciated.

Documentation Requirements: What Makes It a Loan, Not a Gift

The IRS will reclassify a purported loan as a gift if the transaction does not have the economic substance of a genuine creditor-debtor relationship. This reclassification is the primary risk of intra-family loans and has been litigated extensively. The following documentation and conduct requirements are non-negotiable:

1. Written Promissory Note

A signed, dated promissory note must exist at the time of the loan, specifying: principal amount, interest rate (at or above the applicable AFR), compounding period, payment schedule (monthly, quarterly, or annual), maturity date, and consequences of default. A handshake agreement between family members is a gift, legally speaking.

2. Actual Interest Payments

Interest must be paid on schedule — not deferred, not forgiven, not accumulated. If interest payments are waived year after year, the IRS treats the forgiven interest as an additional annual gift, and the entire loan structure becomes suspect. Payments must flow from the borrower's actual bank account to the lender's bank account. Not a ledger entry. Not a netting arrangement.

3. Arm's-Length Terms

The loan must have terms a commercial lender would recognize as reasonable: a defined maturity date, a principal repayment mechanism, and a rate at least equal to AFR. Open-ended, indefinitely-renewable loans with no maturity date attract IRS scrutiny.

4. Borrower's Ability to Repay

Courts have evaluated whether the borrower had a realistic capacity to repay at the time of origination. A loan to a child with no income against which repayment could be made is suspicious. Ideally, the loan is to a trust that holds income-producing assets, or to an adult child with demonstrated financial resources.

5. Collateral (Optional but Recommended)

While not legally required, pledging collateral — such as the Bitcoin purchased with the loan proceeds — strengthens the arm's-length characterization. It also mirrors what a commercial lender would require, which is precisely the standard the IRS applies.

6. Default Consequences

The promissory note should specify what happens in default (acceleration of principal, default interest rate). If the lender would never actually enforce default against a family member, the IRS may view the note as a sham. The note need not be aggressively punitive — but it must contain commercially realistic terms.

Gift Reclassification Risk: In Rosen v. Commissioner and numerous estate tax cases, the IRS has successfully argued that purported loans were actually gifts where interest was not paid, the borrower had no ability to repay, or the terms were not documented contemporaneously. Every dollar the IRS reclassifies from loan to gift reduces the decedent's available exemption and may create immediate gift tax liability. Use a qualified estate attorney to draft these documents — this is not a DIY exercise.

Intra-Family Loan vs. GRAT: Which Is Better for Bitcoin?

The Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT) is the other primary estate freeze technique for high-appreciation assets. Both accomplish similar goals — transferring appreciation above a hurdle rate without gift tax — but through different mechanisms with different risk profiles.

Factor Intra-Family Loan GRAT
Hurdle rate AFR (~4.5% in 2026) §7520 rate (~5.2–5.8% in 2026)
Gift tax on setup None (loan, not gift) Minimal (zeroed-out GRAT has near-zero gift)
Asset returned if grantor dies during term Loan repaid; net appreciation stays with borrower All assets return to estate — GRAT fails
Volatility exposure Borrower bears full downside (must repay loan regardless) Failed GRAT = no harm; assets return to grantor
Complexity Moderate — promissory note, payment discipline Higher — irrevocable trust, annuity payments, trustee
GST exemption allocation Possible to allocate directly to trust borrower Complex — ETIP rules delay allocation
Best for High-conviction long-term hold; borrower has repayment capacity Shorter time horizon; grantor mortality concern; volatile assets
Bitcoin-specific advantage No forced annuity payments = no forced Bitcoin sales during term GRAT annuity payments may require Bitcoin liquidation in bear market

For Bitcoin specifically, the intra-family loan has one structural advantage over the GRAT that is frequently overlooked: a GRAT requires annuity payments back to the grantor, which may force the trustee to sell Bitcoin if the trust lacks other liquid assets. In a bear market, this is forced selling at the wrong time. An intra-family loan has no such requirement — the borrower can make interest payments from their own income without touching the Bitcoin position.

The GRAT's advantage is the "no harm, no foul" feature: if Bitcoin crashes and the trust underperforms the §7520 rate, the assets return to the grantor and the estate planning exercise simply didn't work — no money lost, no gift tax owed. An intra-family loan borrower still owes the principal plus interest regardless of Bitcoin's performance.

The Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust (IDGT) Combination

The most sophisticated version of the intra-family loan strategy involves lending to an Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust (IDGT) rather than directly to a family member. The IDGT is structured so that:

The IDGT lend combination works as follows:

  1. Grantor seeds the IDGT with a small gift (typically 10% of anticipated loan size) to establish economic substance
  2. Grantor loans the IDGT the full target amount at the AFR rate
  3. IDGT uses the cash to purchase Bitcoin
  4. Bitcoin appreciates; IDGT makes annual interest payments to grantor from income or other assets
  5. Grantor pays all income taxes on IDGT income — further depleting the taxable estate without gift tax consequence
  6. At loan maturity, principal is repaid to grantor; Bitcoin appreciation (potentially enormous) remains in the IDGT for beneficiaries

The IDGT effectively supercharges the estate freeze: the grantor is paying taxes on trust income (further reducing their estate) while the trust grows tax-efficiently for beneficiaries. This technique was popularized for closely held business interests and works particularly well for Bitcoin given its high appreciation potential and the grantor's typically strong conviction in the asset.

Intra-Family Loan vs. Outright Gift: The Trade-Off

An outright gift of Bitcoin uses lifetime exemption. Under the One Big Beautiful Budget Act (OBBBA) framework, the 2026 exemption is approximately $15 million per individual ($30 million per married couple). For families with estates well above $30 million, or those who have already used substantial exemption, the intra-family loan offers a path that does not consume this scarce resource.

Factor Outright Gift of Bitcoin Intra-Family Loan for Bitcoin Purchase
Lifetime exemption used Full FMV of Bitcoin gifted None (loan, not gift)
Basis transferred Carryover basis (donor's basis carries to recipient) Recipient has full basis equal to purchase price (cash paid for Bitcoin)
Gift tax return (Form 709) Required if gift exceeds annual exclusion Not required (no gift)
Downside risk Donor: loss of exemption used; Recipient: full downside Borrower: must repay loan regardless of asset performance
Capital gain outcome for recipient Carryover basis — inherits donor's embedded gain Fresh basis — capital gain only on appreciation above purchase price

Notice the basis difference. When you gift Bitcoin with a $20,000 cost basis and current value of $80,000, the recipient takes your $20,000 carryover basis. When they eventually sell at $200,000, they owe capital gains on $180,000. If instead they use an intra-family loan to purchase Bitcoin at $80,000, their basis is $80,000 — they only owe capital gains on $120,000. The intra-family loan gives the recipient a higher, fresher basis.

Bitcoin-Specific Risks and Considerations

Repayment Risk in a Bear Market

The intra-family loan requires repayment of principal. If Bitcoin drops 80% during the loan term — as it has historically — the borrower may be unable to repay without selling Bitcoin at a loss or finding other sources. Before establishing the loan, model the repayment scenario: what happens if Bitcoin falls 75% and stays down for 2 years? The borrower needs income or liquid assets sufficient to make interest payments and eventually repay principal independent of the Bitcoin position.

Loan Forgiveness as a Taxable Gift

If the lender forgives the loan at maturity (or any time during the term), the forgiven amount is a gift equal to the outstanding principal plus accrued interest. This uses lifetime exemption and may require a Form 709 filing. Forgiveness should not be the backstop plan — repayment should be the plan.

Death of Lender During Term

If the lender (parent) dies during the loan term, the outstanding loan balance is an asset of the estate. The loan receivable gets included in the gross estate at its fair market value. This is not catastrophic — the loan comes back at principal, not at the appreciated Bitcoin value. But it means the estate must account for the note. The executor and estate attorney need to know the loan exists.

IRS Audit Scrutiny

Intra-family loans in the context of estate planning are a known IRS examination focus, particularly in estate and gift tax audits. The documentation requirements described above are not optional enhancements — they are the difference between a valid estate freeze and a taxable gift that uses up exemption you intended to preserve. Use a qualified estate and tax attorney, not a template promissory note from the internet.

Practical Example: $2M Loan to Dynasty Trust

Here is how a well-structured Bitcoin intra-family loan might be implemented in 2026:

  1. Establish a South Dakota dynasty trust as the borrower. SD has perpetual trust duration, favorable directed trust statutes, no state income tax, and strong spendthrift protection.
  2. Seed the trust with a $200,000 gift (10% of target loan) to establish economic substance. Use annual exclusions ($38,000/yr for a couple with gift splitting) or a small exemption allocation.
  3. Loan the trust $2,000,000 via a promissory note at the current long-term AFR (approximately 4.5%), with annual interest payments and a 15-year term.
  4. Trust purchases Bitcoin with the $2.2M total ($200K gift + $2M loan). Bitcoin purchase gives trust a cost basis of $2.2M.
  5. Annual interest: Trust pays $90,000/year to grantor (4.5% × $2M). Grantor reports as ordinary income. Trust can fund this from the seeded gift plus any mining income or other cash held in the trust.
  6. At maturity: Trust repays $2M principal. If Bitcoin is at $22M (10x over 15 years — plausible given historical), the trust retains $20M+ in appreciation. Zero gift tax. Zero estate tax on that $20M (held in dynasty trust perpetually).
  7. Allocate GST exemption to the dynasty trust at inception. This shelters all trust assets — including the $20M+ of Bitcoin appreciation — from generation-skipping transfer tax for all future generations.

Mining as a Tax Strategy for Bitcoin Wealth

Bitcoin mining operations generate active business income and significant depreciation deductions — often the most powerful complement to estate planning structures like intra-family loans and dynasty trusts.

Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy →

Choosing the Right Mining Host: Institutional-Grade Due Diligence

If the intra-family loan proceeds (or related estate planning liquidity) are being directed toward Bitcoin mining investments, the quality of the hosting operation determines actual returns. Before committing capital to any mining host, work through a structured due diligence framework.

The 36 questions every Bitcoin mining host should answer covers power contracts, uptime guarantees, security, insurance, financial stability, custody of mined coins, and fee structures — the complete picture a sophisticated investor needs before placing capital in any mining operation.

8-Item Bitcoin Intra-Family Loan Checklist

Common Mistakes with Bitcoin Intra-Family Loans

1. Setting the Rate Below AFR

Loans below the applicable AFR trigger §7872 imputed interest — the IRS calculates what the interest should have been and treats the difference as a deemed gift from lender to borrower each year. This uses lifetime exemption and may require gift tax returns. Always use the published AFR for the appropriate term at the time the loan is made.

2. No Written Promissory Note at Origination

Creating a promissory note retroactively is not effective. The IRS (and courts) require that the loan documentation exist at the time money changes hands. "We always intended it to be a loan" is not sufficient. The note must be signed and dated contemporaneously with the transfer of funds.

3. Forgiving Interest or Principal Informally

Many parents have the informal understanding that the loan will never really be repaid. If that understanding exists from the start, the IRS has strong grounds to reclassify the entire transaction as a gift. If circumstances change and forgiveness becomes appropriate, use formal gift documentation with Form 709 analysis — do not simply stop making demands for repayment.

4. Lending Directly to an Adult Child Instead of a Trust

Lending directly to a child creates personal creditor exposure, divorce risk, and no generation-skipping protection. An IDGT or dynasty trust as borrower: keeps assets in spendthrift-protected environment, enables GST exemption allocation, and maintains professional trustee oversight over the investment.

5. Failing to Model the Repayment Scenario

Parents with high Bitcoin conviction sometimes assume the price will always be high enough to repay the loan. Bitcoin's historical volatility includes 80%+ drawdowns. The trust or borrowing child must have a repayment plan that does not depend entirely on Bitcoin price recovery. Annual interest payments especially need a cash source — not just theoretical Bitcoin value.

6. Ignoring the Basis Impact

Unlike a gift (which carries over the donor's basis), the intra-family loan gives the borrower a fresh purchase-price basis. This is generally better — but it also means that if the borrower sells during a high-value period, they owe capital gains only on appreciation from their purchase date. Plan the loan timing with this basis consideration in mind.

Educational Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. IRC §7872 intra-family loan structures involve complex documentation requirements and are subject to IRS scrutiny. Tax and legal consequences depend on individual circumstances, loan structuring, and applicable state law. Consult a qualified estate attorney and CPA before implementing any strategy described here.

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