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When trust beneficiaries receive distributions from the trust's principal balance, they don't have to pay taxes on this disbursement. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) assumes this money was taxed before being placed into the trust. Gains on the trust are taxable as income to the beneficiary or the trust.
The fiduciary of a domestic decedent's estate, trust, or bankruptcy estate files Form 1041 to report: The income, deductions, gains, losses, etc. of the estate or trust. The income that is either accumulated or held for future distribution or distributed currently to the beneficiaries.
A trust or, for its final tax year, a decedent's estate may elect under section 643(g) to have any part of its estimated tax payments (but not income tax withheld) treated as made by a beneficiary or beneficiaries.
Report income distributions to beneficiaries and to the IRS on Schedule K-1 (Form 1041). For calendar year estates and trusts, file Form 1041 and Schedule(s) K-1 on or before April 15 of the following year.
Income beneficiaries may benefit only from the income generated and distributed by the trust. They have no expectation to benefit from the trust capital, whether it is a distribution of the actual trust assets or a gain from the realisation of the trust assets.