Answer:

Taxpayers can minimize their tax liability through legitimate investments, but they cannot invest in abusive tax avoidance transactions  to minimize or eliminate their tax liability. An abusive tax avoidance transaction:

  • Offers inflated tax savings that are disproportionately greater than the actual investment placed at risk. Generally, an abusive tax avoidance transaction generates little or no income or capital appreciation.
  • Is a transaction in which a significant purpose is the avoidance or evasion of federal income taxes. In comparison, a legitimate investment produces income or capital appreciation and involves a risk of loss proportionate to the investment. Additionally, a legitimate investment has a business purpose other than the reduction of taxes.
  • Is often marketed by a material advisor in terms of how much you can reduce your tax liability; refer to the Instructions for Form 8918, Material Advisor Disclosure Statement, for more information.

Investigate your investment to discover if it is an abusive tax avoidance transaction. Current information on our website covering abusive tax avoidance transactions includes:

  • The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, which contains many provisions that affect disclosure of abusive tax avoidance transactions.
  • The forms needed to disclose reportable transactions.
  •  Penalties associated with abusive tax avoidance transactions.
  • Listed transactions, which are a type of a reportable transactions that are the same as or substantially similar to ones that the IRS has determined to be tax avoidance transactions and identified by IRS notice or other form of published guidance. The most up-to-date list of all listed transactions can be found at Recognized abusive and listed transactions.
  • Transactions of interest, which are transactions that the IRS and Treasury Department believe have a potential for tax avoidance or evasion, but about which the IRS and Treasury Department lack enough information to determine that the transactions are inherently tax avoidance transactions. The most up-to-date list of all transactions of interest can be found at Transactions of interest.

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Answer:

You can deduct the expenses incurred by an estate for its administration either as an expense against the estate tax or against the annual income tax of the estate.

In general, administration expenses deductible in figuring the estate tax include:

  • Fees paid to the fiduciary for administering the estate,
  • Attorney, accountant, and return preparer fees,
  • Expenses incurred for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property, and
  • Expenses in connection with the determination, collection, or refund of the estate's tax liability.

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