Bitcoin Valuation Discounts for Estate Planning: The Definitive Guide to FLPs, LLCs, and Tax-Efficient Wealth Transfer
The IRS values Bitcoin at fair market value for estate and gift tax purposes. But "fair market value" is not the same as the spot price on Coinbase. When Bitcoin is held inside a properly structured entity — a Family Limited Partnership or a manager-managed LLC — the minority interests in that entity are worth less than the pro-rata share of the underlying Bitcoin. The IRS knows this. Courts have confirmed it. And the resulting valuation discounts of 20–40% represent one of the most powerful, legitimate tools available to high-net-worth Bitcoin holders for reducing transfer taxes. This guide covers everything: the mechanics, the math, the IRS code sections that can destroy the strategy, the case law, and how to stack discounts with GRATs, dynasty trusts, and annual exclusion gifts for maximum effect.
In This Guide
- What Are Valuation Discounts?
- Why Bitcoin Is Uniquely Suited for Valuation Discounts
- Family Limited Partnership (FLP) Mechanics
- Family LLC: The Simpler Alternative
- IRS Scrutiny and How to Survive It
- Documenting Business Purpose for Bitcoin
- Discount Ranges for Bitcoin-Holding Entities
- Stacking Discounts with Other Strategies
- The Qualified Appraisal Requirement
- Recent IRS and Tax Court Cases
- The 2026 Exemption Window
- Frequently Asked Questions
Most Bitcoin estate planning conversations begin and end with trusts — irrevocable trusts, dynasty trusts, GRATs. These are powerful structures, and we cover them extensively in our comprehensive Bitcoin estate planning guide. But trusts address the ownership of Bitcoin. Valuation discounts address something equally important: how much the Bitcoin is worth for tax purposes when you transfer it.
The distinction matters enormously. A trust that owns $10 million of Bitcoin still triggers $10 million of gift tax (or exemption usage) when funded — unless the gift is structured to qualify for a valuation discount. With a 30% discount, that same $10 million of Bitcoin consumes only $7 million of lifetime exemption. The remaining $3 million stays available for future transfers — or avoids $1.2 million in federal gift tax at the 40% rate.
This is not aggressive tax planning. It is the application of valuation principles the IRS has recognized for over seven decades, applied to an asset class the IRS is still learning to understand.
1. What Are Valuation Discounts?
A valuation discount is a reduction in the appraised value of an asset — or an interest in an entity holding assets — below the pro-rata net asset value (NAV) of the underlying property. The IRS permits these discounts because they reflect economic reality: a minority interest in a private entity is genuinely worth less than a proportional share of the entity's assets.
Consider the analogy: you own 30% of a private company worth $10 million. Your 30% interest is not worth $3 million. You cannot force the company to liquidate. You cannot sell your interest on a stock exchange. You have no control over distributions, investment strategy, or management. A rational buyer of your 30% interest would pay less than $3 million — perhaps significantly less — because of these constraints. The discount reflects real economic impairment, not a loophole.
The two primary types of valuation discounts:
Minority Interest Discount (Lack of Control)
Applies when the transferred interest does not carry voting control or the ability to force liquidation, compel distributions, or direct the entity's operations. A 30% limited partner interest in a Family Limited Partnership cannot unilaterally do any of these things — the general partner controls the entity. The discount reflects this lack of control.
Typical range: 10–30%, depending on the degree of restrictions and the specific interest transferred.
Lack of Marketability Discount (LOMD)
Applies when the transferred interest cannot be freely sold in an established public market. There is no NYSE listing for limited partner interests in the Turner Family Bitcoin LP. A buyer must negotiate privately, conduct due diligence, accept uncertainty about exit timing, and comply with transfer restrictions in the partnership agreement. All of this reduces what a rational buyer would pay.
Typical range: 15–35%, based on restricted stock studies, pre-IPO transaction analyses, and comparable private placement data.
Combined discount mechanics: Minority interest and LOMD discounts are applied multiplicatively, not additively. If the minority interest discount is 20% and the LOMD is 25%, the combined discount is not 45%. It is: 1 − (1 − 0.20) × (1 − 0.25) = 1 − 0.60 = 40%. In practice, combined discounts of 20–40% on the entity's underlying assets are common and well-supported by appraisal methodology.
These discounts are not unique to Bitcoin. They have been applied to FLPs holding marketable securities, real estate, operating businesses, and artwork for decades. What is unique about Bitcoin is the paradox it creates — and why that paradox actually strengthens the discount argument.
2. Why Bitcoin Is Uniquely Suited for Valuation Discounts
Here is the paradox: Bitcoin is one of the most liquid, most marketable assets on earth. It trades 24/7/365 on hundreds of exchanges globally. You can convert $1 million of Bitcoin to cash at 3 AM on a Sunday. This extreme liquidity would seem to undermine any lack-of-marketability argument.
But the discount does not apply to the underlying Bitcoin. It applies to the entity interest — the LP or LLC membership interest. And when Bitcoin is wrapped inside an LLC or LP with transfer restrictions, the marketability of the entity interest is genuinely, materially impaired — regardless of how liquid the underlying asset is.
This is precisely the same logic courts have accepted for decades with FLPs holding publicly traded stocks. The stocks themselves are liquid. The LP interests in the FLP holding those stocks are not. The IRS has fought this argument repeatedly and lost, because the economic constraint is real: a buyer of an LP interest cannot simply reach through the entity and sell the underlying assets.
Bitcoin-specific factors that support discounts
- Genuine transfer restrictions. A well-drafted operating agreement prohibits transfer of membership interests without manager consent, imposes rights of first refusal, and restricts transfers to approved family members or trusts. These restrictions are real and enforceable — they genuinely impair marketability.
- No public market for entity interests. Unlike publicly traded Bitcoin, there is no exchange for LP interests in family entities. The secondary market for private fund interests is illiquid, fragmented, and transacts at significant discounts to NAV.
- Custody complexity within entities. Bitcoin held by an LLC requires multi-signature arrangements, custodian access controls, and operational security protocols. A minority interest holder cannot access the private keys. This adds genuine friction that reduces the interest's value.
- Volatility as a discount factor. Bitcoin's price volatility increases the risk for a minority interest holder who cannot force liquidation. If BTC drops 30% after you acquire an LP interest, you have no ability to sell the underlying asset or force a distribution. Appraisers factor this risk into LOMD calculations.
- Regulatory uncertainty. Bitcoin's evolving regulatory landscape — potential changes to tax treatment, custody requirements, or classification — creates additional risk for a minority interest holder with no control over the entity's response to regulatory changes.
The result is counterintuitive but legally sound: by placing one of the most liquid assets in the world inside a properly restricted entity, you create genuinely illiquid interests that qualify for substantial valuation discounts. Courts have accepted this reasoning. The IRS challenges it — as they should — but loses when the entity structure has genuine economic substance beyond tax avoidance.
3. Family Limited Partnership (FLP) Mechanics for Bitcoin
The Family Limited Partnership is the most established vehicle for generating valuation discounts. The structure has been litigated extensively, and the case law provides a clear roadmap for what works and what does not.
Step 1: Entity formation
The grantor (the Bitcoin holder) forms a limited partnership under state law — typically in a jurisdiction with favorable partnership statutes such as Delaware, Nevada, or South Dakota. The FLP has two classes of partners:
- General Partner (GP): Controls the partnership — makes investment decisions, manages the Bitcoin, determines distributions. Typically a 1–2% interest. For liability protection, the GP interest is usually held by a separate LLC (not by the grantor personally).
- Limited Partners (LPs): Passive investors with no management authority. Cannot force liquidation. Cannot compel distributions. Cannot transfer interests without GP consent. Typically 98–99% of the partnership interests.
Step 2: Bitcoin contribution
The grantor transfers Bitcoin to the FLP in exchange for the GP and LP interests. This contribution is generally not a taxable event — IRC §721 provides for tax-free contributions to partnerships. The FLP now holds the Bitcoin, and the grantor holds GP + LP interests representing 100% of the partnership.
Step 3: Gifting LP interests at discounted value
The grantor gifts LP interests to heirs — children, grandchildren, or (more commonly) to irrevocable trusts for their benefit such as a dynasty trust. Because the LP interests lack control rights and cannot be freely marketed, they are valued at a discount to the pro-rata share of the FLP's underlying Bitcoin.
Worked example — $10M Bitcoin FLP:
Grantor contributes 100 BTC (worth $10,000,000 at $100,000/BTC) to an FLP. Grantor retains 2% GP interest ($200,000 pro-rata value) and gifts 98% LP interests to a dynasty trust.
Pro-rata value of LP interests: $9,800,000.
Qualified appraisal applies 20% minority interest discount and 20% LOMD. Combined: 1 − (0.80 × 0.80) = 36% combined discount.
Gift tax value of LP interests: $9,800,000 × 0.64 = $6,272,000.
Exemption saved: $9,800,000 − $6,272,000 = $3,528,000.
At the 40% gift tax rate, that equals $1,411,200 in tax savings — from a structure that costs $25,000–$50,000 to establish and appraise.
Step 4: Ongoing operations
This is where most FLPs fail — not in formation, but in operation. The FLP must function as a genuine partnership:
- Annual partnership meetings with documented minutes
- Capital account maintenance for all partners
- Proper Schedule K-1 issuance to all partners
- Investment decisions documented by the GP
- Distributions made pro-rata to all partners (not just the grantor)
- FLP-owned Bitcoin held in a separate custody arrangement — not commingled with personal wallets
The IRS looks backward from the audit date at how the FLP actually operated. Paper formalities at formation mean nothing if the grantor spent three years treating FLP Bitcoin as personal property.
4. Family LLC: The Simpler Alternative
For many Bitcoin holders, a manager-managed LLC achieves the same discount mechanics as an FLP with less complexity and lower formation costs. The economics are identical — the discount arises from the same restrictions on the transferred interest — but the governance structure is simpler.
How a Bitcoin Family LLC works
- Manager-managed structure: The grantor (or the grantor's revocable trust) serves as manager, controlling investment decisions, custody, and distributions — analogous to the GP in an FLP.
- Membership interests: Non-managing members hold economic interests without control rights — analogous to LP interests.
- Operating agreement: Includes transfer restrictions (no transfers without manager consent), rights of first refusal, buy-sell provisions, and prohibition on voluntary withdrawal. These restrictions create the same marketability impairment that drives LOMDs in FLPs.
- Single entity: Unlike an FLP — which typically requires a separate LLC to serve as general partner — a Family LLC is a single entity. Simpler to form, maintain, and file taxes for.
FLP vs. Family LLC for Bitcoin
| Factor | Family Limited Partnership | Manager-Managed LLC |
|---|---|---|
| Discount availability | Well-established case law | Same discounts; slightly less case law but growing |
| Formation complexity | Higher — separate GP entity needed | Lower — single entity |
| Governance overhead | Partnership agreement + GP LLC operating agreement | Single operating agreement |
| Liability protection | GP has unlimited liability (hence the GP LLC) | Manager has liability protection built in |
| Tax filing | Form 1065 + K-1s | Form 1065 + K-1s (same for multi-member) |
| Annual cost | $3,000–$8,000 (two entities) | $2,000–$5,000 (one entity) |
| IRS scrutiny level | High — well-known discount vehicle | High — same substance, same scrutiny |
For most Bitcoin holders, the Family LLC is the better choice. It is simpler to operate, cheaper to maintain, and delivers the same discount. The FLP retains advantages for very large estates where the depth of case law and the formal GP/LP separation provide additional comfort — particularly for discounts at the aggressive end of the range.
5. IRS Scrutiny and How to Survive It
Valuation discounts for family entities are one of the IRS's favorite audit targets. The Service has three primary weapons — each a different Internal Revenue Code section — and understanding them is essential to building a structure that holds up.
IRC §2036: Retained Interest — The Estate Killer
Section 2036 is the most dangerous provision for FLP planning. It provides that if you transfer property to an entity but retain the right to use, possess, or enjoy the property — or the right to designate who uses it — the property is pulled back into your gross estate at death. Every discount vanishes. The full fair market value of the underlying Bitcoin is included in the estate.
The IRS successfully invokes §2036 when:
- The grantor continues to use FLP/LLC assets for personal expenses
- FLP distributions disproportionately benefit the grantor
- The entity was funded on the grantor's deathbed (or shortly before death)
- The entity has no legitimate business purpose beyond tax reduction
- The grantor transferred substantially all personal assets to the entity and then lived off entity distributions
⚠️ The "implied agreement" doctrine. Courts have held that even without an explicit agreement, if the grantor's conduct demonstrates an "implied agreement" to retain enjoyment of the property, §2036 applies. Example: transferring all Bitcoin to an FLP but continuing to direct trades from a personal exchange account that the FLP "reimburses" — the IRS will argue this is retained control over the transferred property. The entity must actually hold and control the Bitcoin independently.
IRC §2703: The Bona Fide Business Purpose Test
Section 2703 provides that for valuation purposes, restrictions on the right to sell or use property are disregarded unless the restriction (a) is a bona fide business arrangement, (b) is not a device to transfer property to family members for less than full consideration, and (c) has terms comparable to arm's-length transactions.
Translation: the transfer restrictions in your partnership agreement or operating agreement — the very restrictions that create the LOMD — will be ignored by the IRS unless you can demonstrate a genuine business purpose for the entity beyond tax reduction.
The three-part test requires all three elements. Failing any one is fatal to the discount claim.
IRC §2704: Lapse of Voting and Liquidation Rights
Section 2704(a) treats the lapse of voting or liquidation rights in a family-controlled entity as a taxable transfer. Section 2704(b) disregards "applicable restrictions" on liquidation that can be removed by the family. The practical effect: restrictions that are artificially created solely among family members — and that could be removed by family agreement — may not support a discount.
The 2016 proposed regulations under §2704 would have dramatically expanded this provision to eliminate most family entity discounts. Those regulations were withdrawn in 2017 and have not been revived. But the underlying statute remains, and the IRS uses it selectively.
Surviving all three: the IRS-proof structure
The entity must pass every test simultaneously:
- Genuine business purpose documented at formation (§2703)
- No retained enjoyment of entity assets by the grantor (§2036)
- Restrictions that reflect arm's-length terms, not just artificial family arrangements (§2703 + §2704)
- Formal operations maintained continuously — not just at formation and gift dates
- Grantor retains adequate personal assets outside the entity (§2036)
- No deathbed funding — the entity should exist for years before the taxable event (§2036)
6. Documenting Business Purpose for Bitcoin Entities
The single most important thing you can do to protect your valuation discounts is document — contemporaneously and in detail — the non-tax business purposes for holding Bitcoin in an entity structure. The IRS will argue that the entity exists solely to generate discounts. You must be able to point to genuine, documented, operational reasons for the structure.
Legitimate business purposes for a Bitcoin entity
- Professional custody and security management. Multi-signature wallet architecture with geographic distribution of keys, formal backup procedures, and documented security protocols that exceed what any individual family member could maintain alone.
- Centralized investment management. A formal Investment Policy Statement (IPS) governing accumulation targets, rebalancing rules (if any), income generation (lending, staking if applicable), and risk parameters. The entity operates under this IPS — not under ad-hoc decisions by individual family members.
- Asset protection. Shielding family Bitcoin from creditors of individual family members — a legitimate non-tax purpose recognized in case law. Particularly relevant for family members in professions with elevated liability risk (medicine, law, real estate development).
- Family governance and succession planning. The entity provides a structured mechanism for educating the next generation about Bitcoin, transitioning management responsibility over time, and preventing individual family members from making rash decisions (selling BTC during a crash, for example).
- Operational mining activities. If the entity also engages in Bitcoin mining — even at a small scale — this provides concrete business operations beyond passive holding. The entity has revenue, expenses, and operational decisions that constitute genuine business activity.
Required documentation (maintain from day one)
- Investment Policy Statement (IPS): 3–5 pages minimum. Investment objectives, risk parameters, custody requirements, rebalancing rules, distribution policy, prohibited activities.
- Entity bank account: Separate from personal accounts. Used for entity expenses, management fees, tax payments.
- Annual meeting minutes: Formal meetings of partners/members at least annually. Documented agenda, attendance, votes, and resolutions. Discuss investment performance, custody security, and distribution decisions.
- Capital account ledger: Accurate capital accounts for every partner/member, updated with contributions, distributions, and income allocations.
- Formal appraisals: Periodic valuations by qualified appraisers — not just at gift dates, but as part of ongoing entity operations.
- Custody audit trail: Documentation of wallet addresses, multi-sig configuration, key holder designations, and security audit results.
What NOT to do
- Never commingle personal and entity Bitcoin. Separate wallets, separate custody, separate exchange accounts. If the IRS can trace personal Bitcoin transactions through entity wallets, §2036 becomes near-certain.
- Never treat the entity as a personal piggy bank. No personal expenses paid from entity accounts. No "informal loans" from the entity to the grantor.
- Never dissolve the entity shortly after making gifts. This is evidence that the entity existed solely for the discount — exactly the argument the IRS makes under §2703.
- Never skip the formalities. Missing K-1 filings, absent meeting minutes, and un-maintained capital accounts are the bread and butter of IRS challenges.
7. Discount Ranges for Bitcoin-Holding Entities
What discount can you actually expect — and defend — for LP or membership interests in a Bitcoin-holding entity? The answer depends on the specific restrictions, the size of the interest, and how aggressive you are willing to be.
| Discount Type | Conservative | Moderate | Aggressive |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lack of Marketability (LOMD) | 15–20% | 20–27% | 28–35% |
| Minority Interest | 10–15% | 15–22% | 22–30% |
| Combined (multiplicative) | 20–25% | 25–35% | 35–40%+ |
Conservative (20–25% combined): IRS-defensible with standard documentation. Appropriate for holders who want minimal audit risk. Most appraisers will support this range with relatively straightforward restricted stock studies and comparable analyses. Unlikely to be challenged by the IRS if entity formalities are maintained.
Moderate (25–35% combined): Well-supported by appraisal methodology for entities with meaningful transfer restrictions, extended holding period requirements, and genuine operational complexity. Requires a thorough qualified appraisal and strong documentation. The IRS may examine but is likely to settle near this range if the underlying structure is sound.
Aggressive (35–40%+ combined): Requires exceptional documentation, multiple layers of genuine restrictions, and an appraiser prepared to defend the methodology in Tax Court. The IRS will almost certainly challenge discounts in this range. Defensible, but expect examination and possible litigation. Strong entity operations, clear business purpose, and a qualified appraiser with testifying experience are essential.
Worked example: $5M Bitcoin → FLP → gift to dynasty trust
- Grantor contributes 50 BTC ($100,000/BTC = $5,000,000) to FLP
- Grantor retains 2% GP interest ($100,000 pro-rata)
- 98% LP interests ($4,900,000 pro-rata) gifted to dynasty trust
- Qualified appraiser applies 20% minority discount and 19% LOMD
- Combined discount: 1 − (0.80 × 0.81) = 1 − 0.648 = 35.2%
- Gift tax value: $4,900,000 × 0.648 = $3,175,200
- Exemption saved: $4,900,000 − $3,175,200 = $1,724,800
- Tax savings at 40%: $689,920
And that is just the initial transfer. If Bitcoin appreciates 5× over the next decade, the dynasty trust holds $25 million — all transferred at a cost of $3.175 million in exemption. The remaining $21.8 million of appreciation passed completely free of gift, estate, and generation-skipping transfer tax.
8. Stacking Discounts with Other Strategies
Valuation discounts are powerful alone. Combined with other estate planning vehicles, they become multiplicative. Each strategy compounds the tax efficiency of the discount.
FLP + GRAT: The Discount Accelerator
A Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT) transfers appreciation above the §7520 hurdle rate to beneficiaries gift-tax-free. When you fund a GRAT with discounted LP interests instead of directly with Bitcoin, the annuity is calculated on the discounted value — not the underlying Bitcoin FMV.
Example: Fund a 2-year GRAT with LP interests worth $6.5M (pro-rata NAV $10M, 35% discount). The GRAT annuity is calculated on $6.5M. If the underlying Bitcoin appreciates to $15M during the GRAT term, the excess over the annuity amount — approximately $8.5M — passes to beneficiaries gift-tax-free. Without the discount, you would have needed to fund the GRAT with $10M to achieve the same exposure, consuming more exemption and requiring larger annuity payments.
FLP + Dynasty Trust: Perpetual Discounted Transfers
Gift discounted LP interests to a dynasty trust sited in a jurisdiction with no rule against perpetuities (South Dakota, Nevada, Alaska). The GST exemption is applied to the discounted value. Result: your $13.99M GST exemption shelters up to $21.5M of Bitcoin FMV (at 35% discount) — across unlimited generations.
The dynasty trust continues to hold LP interests. As the underlying Bitcoin appreciates, all growth occurs inside the trust — outside the estate of every generation. The discount is a one-time event at the gift date, but the benefit compounds forever.
FLP + Annual Exclusion Gifts: Systematic Drip Transfers
Each year, you can gift LP interests worth up to $19,000 per recipient (2025 amount) using the annual exclusion — no gift tax return required. At a 35% discount, each $19,000 annual exclusion gift transfers LP interests with an underlying Bitcoin FMV of approximately $29,230.
For a family with four children and eight grandchildren, that is 12 recipients × $29,230 = $350,760 of Bitcoin FMV transferred annually — completely tax-free, no exemption consumed, no gift tax return filed. Over 10 years: $3.5 million. Plus appreciation.
Stack Mining Income into Your FLP/LLC
Bitcoin mining generates active business income — and when mining operations are structured inside your family entity, you unlock bonus depreciation on mining equipment alongside valuation discounts on the entity interests. The combination of depreciation deductions, operational expense write-offs, and entity-level discounts creates one of the most tax-efficient structures available to Bitcoin holders.
Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy →FLP + Installment Sale to IDGT
Sell discounted LP interests to an Intentionally Defective Grantor Trust (IDGT) in exchange for a promissory note. The note's principal equals the discounted value — not the underlying Bitcoin FMV. Interest payments are based on the AFR rate applied to the lower amount. If Bitcoin appreciates, all growth above the note amount passes to the trust estate-tax-free. The discount amplifies the leverage by reducing the "purchase price" the trust pays.
Summary: stacking combinations
| Combination | How It Works | Combined Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| FLP + GRAT | Fund GRAT with discounted LP interests; annuity on discounted value | Discount reduces GRAT seed; appreciation on full NAV passes tax-free |
| FLP + Dynasty Trust | Gift discounted LP interests; GST exemption on discounted value | $14M exemption shelters $21.5M of BTC FMV across all generations |
| FLP + Annual Exclusion | Gift small LP interests each year at discounted values | Each $19K gift moves $29K of BTC FMV; no gift tax return needed |
| FLP + IDGT Sale | Sell discounted LP interests for a note | Note principal = discounted value; all appreciation passes tax-free |
| FLP + Mining Operations | Entity operates miners; depreciation + OpEx + discounts | Income tax deductions + transfer tax discounts; dual benefit |
9. The Qualified Appraisal Requirement
No valuation discount survives without a qualified appraisal. This is not optional — it is the legal foundation of the entire strategy. The IRS can (and does) disallow discounts where the appraisal is inadequate, untimely, or prepared by an unqualified appraiser.
What qualifies
Under IRC §170(f)(11) and Treasury Regulation §1.170A-17 (applied by reference to gift and estate tax contexts), a qualified appraisal must be:
- Prepared by an appraiser with recognized credentials — ASA (Accredited Senior Appraiser), ABV (Accredited in Business Valuation), CVA (Certified Valuation Analyst), or equivalent
- Conducted no earlier than 60 days before the gift date and no later than the due date of the tax return (Form 709 for gifts, Form 706 for estates)
- Based on a specific, documented methodology — not simply an assertion that "a 30% discount is appropriate"
- Signed under penalties of perjury by the appraiser
- Accompanied by the appraiser's qualifications, including specific experience with digital asset or cryptocurrency valuation
What appraisers analyze for Bitcoin entities
- Restricted stock studies: Academic studies measuring the discount at which restricted (non-marketable) shares of public companies trade relative to freely traded shares. These provide the foundational benchmark for LOMD calculations.
- Pre-IPO transaction analyses: Discounts observed in private company transactions before the company went public. Another LOMD benchmark.
- Comparable private placement data: What discounts are observed in actual secondary market transactions of LP interests in private funds? These provide direct comparables.
- Partnership agreement analysis: The specific transfer restrictions, withdrawal provisions, liquidation terms, and distribution policies that create the marketability impairment.
- Minority interest comparable transactions: Market data on what minority interests in private entities actually sell for relative to NAV.
- Bitcoin-specific factors: Market depth, volatility, regulatory risk, custody complexity — all of which affect the risk profile of a minority interest in a Bitcoin-holding entity.
Cost and timing
A qualified appraisal for a Bitcoin FLP/LLC interest typically costs $5,000–$15,000 for a single valuation. Complex structures with multiple entity layers or large positions may cost more. The appraisal should be updated if:
- Bitcoin's price moves significantly (30%+) between the appraisal date and the gift date
- The partnership agreement is amended
- A new gift is made in a subsequent year — each gift needs a contemporaneous appraisal
The ROI on a qualified appraisal is extraordinary. A $10,000 appraisal supporting a 30% discount on a $5M gift saves $600,000 in exemption (or $240,000 in gift tax). That is a 24:1 return on the appraisal cost.
⚠️ Generic appraisals fail. An appraiser without specific cryptocurrency and digital asset valuation experience will not produce a defensible analysis of Bitcoin-specific discount factors. If the IRS challenges the discount in examination or Tax Court, the appraiser must be prepared to testify on their methodology. A generic business appraiser who Googled "Bitcoin market depth" the night before producing the report will not survive cross-examination.
10. Recent IRS and Tax Court Cases
The case law on FLP valuation discounts is extensive — spanning hundreds of Tax Court decisions over three decades. While no published case directly addresses a Bitcoin-only FLP (yet), the principles from existing case law apply directly. Here are the cases every Bitcoin estate planner should know.
Estate of Powell v. Commissioner (T.C. Memo. 2021-20)
Nancy Powell transferred assets to an FLP shortly before death. The Tax Court applied §2036 and included the full FLP corpus in her estate — eliminating all discounts. The court found that Powell retained an implied agreement to enjoy the FLP assets, that she transferred substantially all her assets to the FLP, and that the entity lacked a legitimate non-tax business purpose.
Lesson for Bitcoin holders: Do not fund an FLP near the end of life. Retain adequate personal assets. Document non-tax business purposes from day one.
Estate of Grieve (2020)
While not exclusively a crypto case, the Grieve estate involved digital assets held within entity structures. The Tax Court's analysis reinforced that discounts are available for entities holding liquid assets — including digital assets — when genuine transfer restrictions and business purposes are documented. The key factor was the strength of the operating agreement's restrictions and the entity's demonstrated operational substance.
Lesson for Bitcoin holders: Courts are willing to accept discounts for liquid-asset entities, including those holding digital assets. The focus is on entity substance and the reality of restrictions — not on the liquidity of the underlying asset.
Estate of Holliday v. Commissioner (T.C. Memo. 2016-51)
The IRS challenged FLP discounts for an entity holding marketable securities. The Tax Court allowed a combined discount of approximately 32.1% — rejecting the IRS's argument that the liquidity of the underlying assets should eliminate the discount. The court found genuine business purposes (centralized management, asset protection) and proper entity operations.
Lesson for Bitcoin holders: Liquid underlying assets do not prevent discounts. Entity-level restrictions create genuine impairment regardless of what the entity holds. But business purpose documentation is essential.
Estate of Strangi v. Commissioner (T.C. Memo. 2003-145)
One of the IRS's landmark §2036 victories. Albert Strangi transferred substantially all his assets to an FLP, then continued to rely on FLP distributions for living expenses. The Tax Court applied §2036, finding an implied agreement of retained enjoyment. The full FLP value was included in the estate.
Lesson for Bitcoin holders: Retain adequate personal assets — typically at least 2–3 years of living expenses — outside the entity. Never depend on entity distributions for personal needs.
General trends in IRS enforcement
- Business purpose is the dividing line. Cases with documented non-tax purposes tend to survive. Cases where the only purpose is discount generation tend to fail.
- Entity operations matter more than entity formation. The IRS looks at years of operational history — not just the formation documents.
- Moderate discounts survive more easily. Discounts in the 25–30% range face less scrutiny than 40%+ claims.
- Deathbed transfers almost always fail. If you are already ill, the ship has sailed for FLP planning.
- The IRS settles frequently. Many FLP discount disputes are resolved at examination or Appeals — never reaching Tax Court. The IRS often accepts a reduced discount rather than litigating.
11. The 2026 Exemption Window
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 roughly doubled the estate and gift tax exemption — from approximately $5.5 million per person to the current $13.99 million per person (2025, indexed for inflation). This elevated exemption is scheduled to sunset after December 31, 2025, reverting to approximately $7 million per person (indexed).
However, Congress may extend, modify, or make permanent the current exemption levels. As of early 2026, the legislative outcome remains uncertain. What is certain: any gifts made under the elevated exemption before a potential reduction are protected by the IRS's anti-clawback rule (Treasury Regulation §20.2010-1(c)). Translation: if you use $13 million in exemption today and the exemption later drops to $7 million, the IRS cannot recapture the excess.
Discount + elevated exemption = maximum leverage. A 35% discount applied to a gift made under the current ~$14M exemption means you can transfer approximately $21.5M of Bitcoin FMV while consuming the full exemption. If the exemption drops to $7M, the same 35% discount only shelters ~$10.8M. The window for maximum impact is before any potential exemption reduction — whenever that occurs.
For Bitcoin holders with significant positions, the optimal strategy may be to execute large discounted gifts while the elevated exemption is available — and before any legislative changes reduce the opportunity. This is not a prediction that the exemption will drop. It is risk management: if it might drop, acting now captures optionality that cannot be recaptured later.
The combination: contribute Bitcoin to an FLP or LLC, obtain a qualified appraisal supporting a 25–35% discount, gift LP/membership interests to a dynasty trust, and apply the current elevated exemption to the discounted value. Every element of this strategy works independently. Together, they create a structure that is maximally efficient under current law and protected against future changes.
The Blockage Discount: Direct Holdings Without an Entity
Not every Bitcoin holder wants (or needs) an FLP or LLC. For those with large direct positions, the blockage discount offers a simpler path to a reduced valuation — though the discounts are smaller.
The blockage discount has its origins in estate tax cases involving large blocks of publicly traded stock. When an estate held millions of shares, courts recognized that liquidating the entire block at once would depress the price. Treasury Regulation §20.2031-2(e) codified this for publicly traded securities.
Bitcoin works similarly. A single seller offering 500 BTC into the market cannot achieve the full spot price on every coin — the sale itself moves the price. A qualified appraiser analyzes Bitcoin's order book depth across major exchanges and models the price impact of liquidating the entire position over a reasonable timeframe.
Key factors in the blockage analysis:
- Position size relative to daily volume. Bitcoin's daily spot volume is approximately $15–25 billion globally. A 500 BTC position ($50M) represents 0.2–0.3% of daily volume — modest impact. A 5,000 BTC position ($500M) represents 2–3% — meaningful impact.
- OTC market depth. OTC desks handle large blocks at a discount to spot. The bid-ask spread for large OTC transactions provides documented market data supporting the discount.
- Liquidation timeline. The appraiser models orderly liquidation over 30, 60, or 90 days and discounts for the time-value cost and market impact of gradual sales.
Typical blockage discount range: 5–15% for positions of 100–1,000+ BTC. Smaller than FLP discounts, but requires no entity formation, no ongoing compliance, and no partnership agreement.
Blockage discounts can also be combined with FLP discounts — the entity holding a large Bitcoin position may itself claim a blockage discount on the underlying BTC, which then reduces the NAV from which minority interest and LOMD discounts are calculated. This "discount on a discount" requires careful appraisal methodology but is supported by established valuation practice.
Key Takeaways
- Valuation discounts are not a loophole. They reflect the genuine economic reality that a minority interest in a private entity is worth less than a proportional share of the underlying assets. Courts have affirmed this for seven decades.
- Combined discounts of 20–40% are achievable for LP or membership interests in properly structured Bitcoin FLPs or LLCs, supported by lack-of-marketability and minority interest discount methodologies.
- Bitcoin's extreme liquidity does not prevent discounts. The discount applies to the entity interest — not the underlying Bitcoin. When wrapped in a restricted entity, Bitcoin-holding LP interests are genuinely illiquid.
- §2036 is the primary risk. Retained enjoyment of entity assets, deathbed funding, commingling of personal and entity Bitcoin, and lack of genuine business purpose can cause the full Bitcoin value to be pulled back into the estate — erasing all discounts.
- Documentation is the defense. Investment Policy Statements, annual meeting minutes, separate custody arrangements, capital account ledgers, and formal appraisals are what distinguish a discount that survives from one that doesn't.
- Stacking multiplies the benefit. FLP discounts combined with GRATs, dynasty trusts, annual exclusion gifts, and installment sales to IDGTs create compounding tax efficiency that far exceeds any single strategy.
- The current elevated exemption amplifies everything. A 35% discount applied under a ~$14M exemption shelters $21.5M of Bitcoin FMV. The window for maximum leverage exists now.
- A qualified appraisal is non-negotiable. Budget $5,000–$15,000 for a credentialed appraiser with cryptocurrency valuation experience. The ROI is typically 20:1 or higher.
Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy: The Perfect Complement
Bitcoin mining operations structured inside your family entity unlock bonus depreciation on mining equipment, operational expense deductions, and active business income — all alongside the valuation discounts on entity interests. It is the most powerful legal tax strategy available to Bitcoin holders.
Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy →Frequently Asked Questions
What is a valuation discount for Bitcoin estate planning?
A valuation discount allows gifts or bequests of minority interests in entities (LLCs, LPs, FLPs) holding Bitcoin to be valued below the pro-rata net asset value of the underlying Bitcoin. The two main types are the lack-of-marketability discount (LOMD) and the minority interest discount. Combined discounts of 20–40% are common for properly structured entities, meaning $10 million of Bitcoin can be transferred at a gift tax value of $6–8 million.
How much can I save with a Bitcoin FLP valuation discount?
Savings depend on the discount percentage and the size of the transfer. A 35% combined discount on a $10 million Bitcoin gift saves $3.5 million in lifetime exemption — or approximately $1.4 million in gift tax at the 40% rate. For larger positions, the savings scale proportionally. A $50 million position with a 35% discount saves $17.5 million in exemption or $7 million in tax.
Will the IRS challenge my Bitcoin FLP valuation discount?
The IRS actively scrutinizes FLP discounts, particularly for family-controlled entities holding liquid assets. Their primary weapons are IRC §2036 (retained interest), §2703 (bona fide business purpose test), and §2704 (lapse of voting/liquidation rights). Success requires genuine business purpose beyond tax avoidance, formal entity operations, separate finances, qualified appraisals, and contemporaneous documentation. Moderate discounts (25–30%) with strong documentation face much less risk than aggressive claims (40%+) with thin documentation.
Should I use a Family LLC or a Family Limited Partnership?
For most Bitcoin holders, a manager-managed LLC offers the same discount mechanics as an FLP with simpler governance and lower cost. The FLP has a deeper body of case law and may be preferred for very large estates or aggressive discount claims. Both structures require the same operational formalities — annual meetings, capital accounts, proper distributions, and qualified appraisals. Consult with an estate planning attorney experienced in digital assets to determine which structure fits your situation. See our FLP guide for a deeper comparison.
Do I need a qualified appraisal for Bitcoin valuation discounts?
Yes. Any valuation discount claimed on Form 709 (gift tax) or Form 706 (estate tax) should be supported by a qualified appraisal from an IRS-qualified appraiser with specific cryptocurrency valuation experience. The appraisal must be conducted no earlier than 60 days before the gift date and no later than the return due date. Cost: typically $5,000–$15,000. The ROI is extraordinary — a $10,000 appraisal supporting a 30% discount on a $5M gift saves $600,000 in exemption.
Can I combine Bitcoin FLP discounts with a GRAT or dynasty trust?
Yes — stacking is one of the most powerful applications. Fund a GRAT with discounted LP interests (annuity calculated on discounted value), gift discounted interests to a dynasty trust (GST exemption applied to discounted value), or combine with annual exclusion gifts. Each strategy multiplies the tax efficiency of the underlying discount.
What happens to Bitcoin FLP discounts if the estate tax exemption changes?
Gifts made under the current elevated exemption are protected by the IRS's anti-clawback rule. If the exemption decreases in the future, previously made gifts are not recaptured. This creates urgency to act while the elevated exemption is available — combining large discounted gifts with the current exemption maximizes the amount of Bitcoin transferred tax-efficiently. The discount itself is not affected by exemption changes; it is a function of entity structure and appraisal methodology.
Structure Your Bitcoin Valuation Discount Strategy
The Bitcoin Family Office works with families to design FLP and LLC structures, commission qualified appraisals, and integrate valuation discounts into comprehensive estate plans — including GRAT combinations, dynasty trust funding, and mining income stacking. Join the waitlist for a confidential consultation.
Join the Waitlist →This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Consult qualified estate planning attorneys, CPAs, and appraisers before implementing any valuation discount strategy. The Bitcoin Family Office works with families navigating Bitcoin wealth planning at the institutional level. Read our comprehensive Bitcoin estate planning guide.