The standard estate planning story ends at the first generation. You build wealth, you plan your estate, you pay estate tax (if your estate exceeds the exemption), and your children inherit what's left. Then your children do the same. And their children. Every 25–30 years, the IRS gets another 40% bite out of the same family's wealth.
A dynasty trust is the solution to that problem — and for business owners who expect significant wealth accumulation over their lifetime, it may be the most important structure they ever set up.
The GST tax was specifically designed to prevent wealthy families from avoiding estate tax by skipping generations. Congress didn't want grandparents passing wealth directly to grandchildren and bypassing the estate tax at the children's generation. The dynasty trust — combined with the GST exemption — is the legislative solution that Congress built into the same law.
You fund the dynasty trust with assets today. The trust holds those assets — investments, business interests, real estate, cash — and manages them for the benefit of your children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and beyond. Each generation draws distributions per the trust's terms. But the underlying assets never go through probate, never trigger a new estate tax event, and never get exposed to any one beneficiary's creditors or divorce proceedings.
You do not need to live in these states to use them for a dynasty trust. What matters is having a trustee or trust company with a legal presence in the chosen state. As an NC resident, you would establish the trust in South Dakota or Nevada with a qualified institutional trustee in that state — then name an investment advisor (who can be in NC or anywhere else) to manage the assets.
The reason state selection matters: North Carolina does not have favorable dynasty trust laws. NC limits trust duration under its rule against perpetuities, and NC has income tax on trust income for NC-connected trusts. Using a state like South Dakota eliminates the state income tax drag on trust growth — potentially saving tens of thousands per year on a large trust.
During grantor's lifetime (grantor trust period): If structured as a grantor trust, income flows to the grantor's personal Form 1040. The grantor pays the trust's income tax — which is treated as an additional gift to the trust's beneficiaries without using any gift exemption. This accelerates wealth transfer.
After grantor's death (non-grantor period): The trust becomes a non-grantor trust, a separate taxpayer requiring an EIN and annual Form 1041 filing. Trust income distributed to beneficiaries is taxed at their individual rates (via Schedule K-1); undistributed income is taxed at compressed trust rates (37% above $14,450 in 2026).
Distribution strategy: Trustees should actively plan distributions to maximize the use of beneficiaries' lower tax brackets, especially in years when the trust has significant income. This is ongoing tax management — not a one-time setup.
No estate tax at transfer: Distributions from a properly structured GST-exempt dynasty trust do not trigger estate tax in the beneficiary's estate. The trust assets themselves never enter a beneficiary's taxable estate.
A dynasty trust is appropriate when:
Step 1: Business owner establishes a Dynasty Trust in South Dakota with a SD institutional trustee and appoints a trusted investment advisor.
Step 2: Business owner transfers LLC membership interests or investment assets into the trust, allocating GST exemption to the transfer.
Step 3: The trust holds the assets. If structured as a grantor trust, the grantor continues paying income tax on trust income (further reducing their taxable estate while growing the trust).
Step 4: Wyoming LLC or other holding entity may sit inside the trust for privacy, liability separation, and management flexibility.
Step 5: Children and grandchildren are discretionary beneficiaries — the trustee distributes income or principal per the trust's distribution standards. No beneficiary "owns" the assets, so no beneficiary's creditors or ex-spouses can reach them.
Result: assets grow for generations, no estate tax at any generational transfer, creditor protection at every level.
Many sophisticated dynasty trust structures layer a Wyoming LLC inside the trust. Wyoming offers the strongest LLC charging order protection in the country — even inside a trust, a creditor who obtains a judgment against a beneficiary cannot force a distribution from a Wyoming LLC. They can only obtain a charging order, which gives them the right to receive distributions if and when the LLC makes them — and the trustee simply doesn't make them.
Wyoming also has no state income tax and strong privacy laws — LLC membership is not publicly disclosed. The combination of a South Dakota dynasty trust holding a Wyoming LLC provides:
The current $13.99M GST exemption is the most favorable in US history — and it's set to expire. Congress could extend it, but cannot be relied upon to do so. The estate planning community broadly expects the exemption to revert to approximately $7M (inflation-adjusted from the pre-TCJA level) if legislation is not passed.
If you have a significant estate and you are not currently using your GST exemption:
Our role is the tax strategy and compliance layer. We analyze the optimal funding amount and structure for your situation, model the estate tax and income tax impact over multiple scenarios, manage annual Form 1041 filing and K-1 distributions for trust beneficiaries, and coordinate with your trust attorney and institutional trustee on implementation. Dynasty trust setup requires an experienced estate planning attorney for the trust document itself — we ensure the tax strategy driving that structure is optimized and the ongoing compliance is handled correctly.
We help NC business owners model dynasty trust strategies, analyze the 2026 sunset impact on their specific estate, and coordinate the tax planning needed to set up and maintain these structures correctly. Planning sessions from $1,497.
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