New Yorkers Face Greater Taxes Underneath Funds Deal – Tax

In early April, New York State leaders reached an agreement for
the State’s Fiscal Year 2022 budget (the Budget Act), which
ushers in significant changes to the New York Tax Law. The bulk of
those changes will impact individual taxpayers and trusts and not
impose new taxes on businesses.1 Most important—and
nine months after Governor Andrew Cuomo put out a plea for New
Yorkers to return—are the Budget Act’s increases to
personal income tax rates that will see some New York residents
paying the highest income tax rates in the nation.2

Individual Tax Rate Increases and Tax Brackets

The Budget Act increases the personal income tax rate to 9.65%
from 8.82% for individuals reporting over approximately $1.1
million in taxable income and for persons filing jointly reporting
over approximately $2.15 million in taxable income.3

Two new tax brackets are set to go into effect under the Budget
Act. For taxpayers reporting more than $5 million in taxable
income, the rate is 10.3%. Those taxpayers reporting more than $25
million in taxable income will be subject to the new top marginal
income tax rate of 10.9%. The rate increases sunset in 2027.

On top of these rate increases, New York City taxpayers must
also contend with the City’s top rate of 3.876%. Individual
residents of New York City reporting over approximately $1.1
million in taxable income and those filing joint returns reporting
over $2.15 million in taxable income are thus saddled with a
combined personal income tax rate of 13.526%. New York City
taxpayers reporting more than $5 million in taxable income will
have a combined personal income tax rate of 14.176%. And taxpayers
reporting more than $25 million in taxable income will be subject
to a combined rate of 14.776%.

Changing Domicile for an Individual

New Yorkers looking to change their domicile/residence should be
cognizant of the two tests employed by the New York Department of
Taxation and Finance (DTF) to determine an individual’s
residency: (1) the Domicile Test and (2) the Statutory
Residence Test.

Under the Domicile Test, the DTF looks to five subjective
factors:

  1. Home—weighing the individual’s use and maintenance of
    a New York residence versus the use and maintenance of an
    out-of-state residence (whether owned, rented, or otherwise);
  2. Active Business Involvement—looking to where the
    individual was employed and earned income, whether they made
    business decisions for or managed a business located in New
    York;
  3. Time Spent—where the individual spent the majority of
    their time;
  4. Heart/Sentimental Items—where the individual maintained
    keepsakes, furniture, pets, etc.; and
  5. Family Connections—where the individual’s immediate
    family (spouses and minor children) was located.

Under the Statutory Residence Test—which, as the name
suggests, is based on statute rather than subjective
evaluation—an individual may be considered a statutory
resident of New York if they are not domiciled in the state but
spend more than 183 days (in the aggregate) in New York and
maintain a “permanent place of abode.”4

Application to New York Trusts

The Budget Act tax increases will also apply to certain trusts
created by a New York resident if the trust is a “Resident
Trust.”5

Generally, for income tax purposes, there are two types of
trusts—”grantor” trusts and “non-grantor”
trusts.

A grantor trust is a trust in which the trust’s creator (the
“grantor”) (or some other person) retains control over,
or an interest in, the trust to such an extent that the grantor (or
such other person) is treated as the owner of all or part of the
trust for federal income tax purposes. Certain powers in the trust
instrument can trigger grantor trust status as determined pursuant
to the provisions of Internal Revenue Code (IRC)
§§ 671–679 and the corresponding regulations.
For example, a trust will be treated as a grantor trust if someone
related to the grantor (e.g., a related trustee) retains the right
to sprinkle the trust’s income among the trust
beneficiaries.

If a trust is a grantor trust, the grantor will be taxed
directly on the income and other tax attributes of the trust on the
grantor’s individual income tax return in the state of the
grantor’s residence. Accordingly, a grantor trust for a New
York resident will be subject to New York state income tax.

A trust that does not qualify as a grantor trust is a
non-grantor trust. Generally, a non-grantor trust pays income tax
at the trust level on the taxable income retained by the trust. New
York treats a trust as a grantor trust or non-grantor trust based
on such trust’s classification for federal income tax
purposes.6

A non-grantor trust created by a New York resident will be
considered a “Resident Trust,” and subject to New York
state income tax on all its income if it has any of the following
characteristics:7

  1. A fiduciary domiciled in New York;
  2. Trust property, real or tangible, located in New York; or
  3. Any income or gains derived from or connected with sources in
    New York.8

A non-grantor trust created by a New York resident that does
not have any of the foregoing characteristics is a
“Resident Exempt Trust,” and will not be subject to New
York state income tax on its trust income.9 In other words, a
non-grantor trust created by a New York resident with only non-New
York fiduciaries, assets, and source income will qualify as a
“Resident Exempt Trust” and avoid New York state income
tax.

Considerations for New York Resident Trusts

New Yorkers with trusts that are considered Resident Trusts
should consider moving those trusts to a state that does not tax
trust income, generally, by changing the trustees of those trusts
to residents of that other state.

Additionally, for trusts with New York situs assets or source
income, steps can be taken to change the character of the New York
situs assets and/or to divide the trust such that the New York
situs assets or source income are segregated into a separate
subtrust. The separate subtrust would continue to be a Resident
Trust while the main trust that would no longer have New York situs
assets or source income would be moved to another state.

Footnotes

1. The Budget Act enacts a
temporary increase to the corporate franchise tax rate from 6.5% to
7.25% through 2023 for corporations with business income in excess
of $5 million.

2. The top marginal rate was
California’s 13.3%.

3. The 8.82% had been New
York’s highest marginal income tax rate since it was enacted in
2009 as a temporary increase to the previous top rate of 6.85%. The
8.82% tax bracket has been extended through 2025 for individual
taxpayers making less than $1 million or joint filers making less
than $2 million. The rate is also increased from 8.82% to 9.65% for
heads of households reporting over approximately $1.6 million of
taxable income.

4. N.Y. Tax Law §
605(b)(1)(B). Permanent place of abode is defined as a
“dwelling place of a permanent nature maintained by the
taxpayer, whether or not owned by him, and will generally include a
dwelling place owned or leased by his or her spouse.” 20 NYCRR
§ 105.20(e).

5. Budget Act, S. 2509-C, Part A,
§ 3; N.Y. Tax Law § 601(c)(1)(.B)(iv).

6. N.Y. Tax Law § 611(a) and
§ 612(a).

7.Instructions to 2020 N.Y. Form
IT-205 at 2.

8. N.Y. Tax Law §
605(b)(3)(D)(i); 20 NYCRR § 105.23(c).

9. N.Y. Tax Law §
605(b)(3)(D)(i); Instructions to 2020 N.Y. Form IT-205 at
2.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general
guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought
about your specific circumstances.