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Estate Accounting

name: estate-accounting

description: Double-entry bookkeeping for estate and trust accounting — capital vs. income classification, principal vs. income allocation (Uniform Principal and Income Act), court-formatted account reports, and fiduciary tax implications. Use when implementing estate ledgers, generating court accountings, classifying receipts and disbursements, or calculating fiduciary tax allocations.

Estate Accounting

Instructions

Implement double-entry bookkeeping systems for estate and trust administration that produce court-compliant accountings and support fiduciary tax reporting.

Chart of Accounts

Estate accounting uses a specialized chart of accounts organized by the court accounting schedule:

Schedule Purpose Account Types
A — Principal on Hand Opening principal balance Assets at date of death/trust inception
B — Receipts of Income Income received during accounting period Interest, dividends, rent, royalties
C — Gains on Principal Appreciation and capital gains Sale proceeds above basis, stock splits
D — Disbursements from Income Income-charged expenses Ordinary repairs, income taxes, routine fees
E — Disbursements from Principal Principal-charged expenses Capital improvements, estate taxes, legal fees
F — Principal on Hand at Close Closing principal balance Remaining assets, investments, cash

Principal vs. Income Classification (UPIA)

The Uniform Principal and Income Act (UPIA) / Uniform Fiduciary Income and Principal Act (UFIPA) governs classification:

Receipts — Allocate to Principal:

  • Proceeds from sale of trust/estate assets
  • Insurance proceeds on trust property
  • Capital gains distributions from mutual funds
  • Stock splits and stock dividends
  • Eminent domain awards
  • Refunds of principal disbursements

Receipts — Allocate to Income:

  • Interest on bank accounts and bonds
  • Cash dividends on stocks
  • Rental income (net of vacancy)
  • Royalties (typically)
  • Business income distributions

Disbursements — Charge to Principal:

  • Capital improvements to real property
  • Estate and inheritance taxes
  • Attorney fees for estate administration
  • Trustee commissions (50% in many jurisdictions)
  • Debts of the decedent
  • Funeral expenses
  • Specific bequests

Disbursements — Charge to Income:

  • Ordinary repairs and maintenance
  • Insurance premiums
  • Property taxes
  • Income taxes on trust/estate income
  • Trustee commissions (50% in many jurisdictions)
  • Accounting and tax preparation fees

Double-Entry Transaction Recording

Every transaction creates balanced entries:


Example: Estate receives $5,000 interest payment
  DR: Cash (Schedule B asset)         $5,000
  CR: Interest Income (Schedule B)    $5,000

Example: Estate pays $3,000 attorney fee for administration
  DR: Legal Fees (Schedule E)         $3,000
  CR: Cash (Schedule A asset)         $3,000

Example: Estate sells stock for $15,000 (basis: $10,000)
  DR: Cash (Schedule A asset)         $15,000
  CR: Stock Investment (Schedule A)   $10,000
  CR: Capital Gain (Schedule C)        $5,000

Court Accounting Report Format

Court accountings follow a jurisdiction-specific format but generally include:

  1. Caption: Court name, case number, estate name, accounting period
  2. Summary of Account: One-page overview of schedules A through F
  3. Schedule A: Detailed list of all principal assets at period start with values
  4. Schedule B: All income receipts, chronologically ordered
  5. Schedule C: All gains and losses on principal transactions
  6. Schedule D: All disbursements charged to income
  7. Schedule E: All disbursements charged to principal
  8. Schedule F: Detailed list of all assets on hand at period close with current values
  9. Proposed Distribution: How remaining assets should be distributed
  10. Supporting Documents: Bank statements, receipts, appraisals

Fiduciary Tax Integration

  • Estate income tax (Form 1041) requires the same income/principal split
  • Distributable Net Income (DNI) determines how much income is taxed to beneficiaries vs. the estate
  • Track income distribution deductions: amounts distributed to beneficiaries shift the tax burden to them
  • Generate Schedule K-1 data for each beneficiary receiving income distributions
  • Estate tax (Form 706) uses date-of-death values from Schedule A, not current values

Valuation Rules

  • Date of death values: Required for Schedule A — use fair market value as of date of death
  • Alternate valuation date: Optional — 6 months after death, used if it reduces estate tax
  • Closing values: Schedule F uses current fair market value at the accounting close date
  • Real property: Requires formal appraisal; do not estimate
  • Securities: Use closing price on the valuation date; for thinly traded securities, use mean of bid/ask

Inputs Required

  • Estate or trust identification (name, case number, EIN)
  • Accounting period start and end dates
  • Opening asset inventory with date-of-death values
  • Transaction journal: all receipts and disbursements with dates, amounts, descriptions
  • Beneficiary list with distribution provisions from the will or trust
  • Jurisdiction (for court format requirements)

Output Format

  • Court-formatted accounting report with Schedules A through F
  • Trial balance showing all accounts with debit/credit totals
  • Income/principal allocation summary
  • Fiduciary tax worksheet (Form 1041 data)
  • Beneficiary income allocation (K-1 data per beneficiary)
  • Reconciliation: opening balance + receipts − disbursements = closing balance

Anti-Patterns

  • Treating estate accounting like business accounting: Estate accounting uses schedules (A-F), not income statements and balance sheets — using business GAAP formatting confuses courts
  • Misclassifying principal as income: Charging a capital improvement to income artificially reduces income beneficiaries’ share — this is a fiduciary breach
  • Ignoring the UPIA: Each jurisdiction adopts some version of the Uniform Principal and Income Act — always check which version applies before classifying
  • Using acquisition cost instead of date-of-death value: Schedule A must use fair market value at death, not what the decedent originally paid
  • Omitting the reconciliation proof: Courts reject accountings where opening + receipts − disbursements ≠ closing — always include the proof
  • Mixing accounting periods: Each court accounting covers a specific period — transactions outside that period belong in a different accounting
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