Financial Planning

Family Limited Partnership: Disadvantages

Family Limited Partnerships can be abusive tax-free wealth transfers. How does the family limited partnership work and what are the disadvantages? To discount estate tax valuations of underlying assets used as a tax deferral strategy when…

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  1. How does the Family Limited Partnership Work?
  2. Gifting to the Younger Generation with a Family Limited Partnership
  3. Two Discount Estate Tax Valuations of Underlying Assets in Family Partnerships are:
  1. Disadvantages of Family Limited Partnerships:
  2. Family Business Succession Estate Planning:
  3. Where the next decision becomes clearer

Family Limited Partnerships can be abusive tax-free wealth transfers. How does the family limited partnership work and what are the disadvantages? To discount estate tax valuations of underlying assets used as a tax deferral strategy when gifting to the younger generation.

 

 

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Family limited partnerships, one such traditional limited partnership, have been over marketed as wealth transfer devises. Family limited partnerships are red flags for the Internal Revenue Service as abusive tax-free wealth transfers. Family partnerships have been widely propagated as the devise of choice for transferring the family business and other highly appreciated assets tax-free from parents to their children.
 
Different programs are available to transfer ownership and the management of a family business. The Family limited partnership is nothing more than the traditional partnership for which “only family members” can be partners as either general partners or limited partners.
 
Did you know that general partners of family partnerships are exposed to frivolous lawsuits, court judgments, and creditor seizures? The problem is avoided if an irrevocable trust such as the Ultra Trust® (not a revocable trust) is used as the general partner of your family limited partnership.
 

How does the Family Limited Partnership Work?

 

The older generation (i.e. parents) become owners with 2% stake in the business and thereby establish themselves as general partners in a family limited partnership. Over a period of time, by gifting limited partnership interests, the younger generation (i.e. children) end up as limited partners with a 98% stake in the business. This all sounds wonderful and an almost ideal tax deferral strategy. But is there a catch to all of this great tax-free wealth transfer and strategy?
 

Gifting to the Younger Generation with a Family Limited Partnership

 

The result is highly appreciated assets are transferred from the estate of the parents to the children presumably tax-free. When carefully and properly implemented the family limited partnership is a useful tool. But there are better ways to achieve a significantly more efficient transfer of wealth.
 
Did you know the IRS considers these family limited partnership arrangements abusive when overzealous practitioners over claim two commonly used discounts in the valuation of underlying (highly appreciated) assets in estate tax valuations? The IRS comes down significantly hard, when these arrangements are made over a deathbed especially in the hours or days before death. Please note that there’s an increasing congressional opposition to the use of family limited partnerships.
 

Two Discount Estate Tax Valuations of Underlying Assets in Family Partnerships are:

 

  1. Lack of marketability discounting which is typically 15% to 35% reduced estate tax valuation due to a limited market for the business or the assets, if sold.
  2. Limited minority interest discounting which is typically an additional 15% to 35% reduced estate tax valuation to the minority position (lack of control) in the business or underlying assets.
Combined, these two discounts can amount up to 70% or more. But how much is too much?
 

Disadvantages of Family Limited Partnerships:

  1. Gifted property does NOT receive the “stepped-up” basis treatment that bequeathed property receives. Therefore the children, who have received “gifted partnership interests” may face unexpected capital gains tax liability. If discounting is reasonably and carefully applied, it’s a significant tax saving devise. Keeping in mind that it’s great for the parents, not so good for the children because of the unexpected capital gains tax liability that can be imposed on the children.
  2. General partners are not insulated from potential lawsuits, judgments, or creditor seizures. This problem can be avoided if the general partner is the Ultra Trust. The parents as general partners are 100% in control of the assets and 100% responsible for a potential lawsuit. General partners will have no asset protection in these cases.

Family Business Succession Estate Planning:

If you have an interest in family business succession planning, there are several financially-engineered devises addressing the following important issues:
  • Ownership of family business – Which of the family members will become the future owners of the business? What method or combination of methods is the most effective in consideration of asset protection and wealth preservation, elimination of probate, deferral of capital gains taxes, elimination of estate taxes, and reduction of taxes on earned income or possibly eliminate income taxes.
  • Control of your family business – Which of the family members will become the future managers. Not all family members have management skills. Some family members should have voting control, while others must become silent partners.
  • Dispute resolution – How will family members deal with potential disputes? What mechanism is fair to controlling and non-controlling family members?
  • Employment – Which family members will be employed by the business?
Read more traditional limited partnerships, your financial goals, estate plannning, deferring taxes, deferring income tax, deferring capital gains tax by clicking here:

Where the next decision becomes clearer

Once Family Limited Partnership: Disadvantages is on the table, the next questions usually center on risk, flexibility, and which planning step deserves attention first.

Points readers weigh before moving forward

  • Timing matters because inheritance, divorce, and family transitions can change the right planning move.
  • Control matters because the grantor, trustee, and beneficiary each affect how protected the structure really is.
  • Funding matters because a trust only protects what has actually been transferred into it.

Practical reading path

To keep the next step practical rather than abstract, readers often move to Beneficiary of Trust, Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust, and Grantor vs Trustee vs Beneficiary. When the question turns from reading to implementation, many readers move from these guides to a direct planning conversation.

Related resources

After reading Family Limited Partnership: Disadvantages, most readers want a clearer next step: which structure answers the same problem, what timing changes the result, and where the practical follow-up questions usually lead.

What people compare next

The next question is usually not abstract. It is whether a trust, an entity, or a different planning step does the real job better in your situation.

What often changes the answer

Timing, ownership, funding, and how much control you want to keep usually matter more than labels alone.

When a conversation helps more

Once structure, timing, and next steps start intersecting, it usually helps to talk through the options in the right order.

Explore Family Limited Partnership vs Trust

See how partnership planning compares with trust planning when control, valuation, and family ownership all matter.

Explore Asset Protection Trust

See how trust-based planning is used to protect wealth, organize control, and support long-term decisions.

Explore Irrevocable Trust

Understand how irrevocable trust planning works, when people use it, and what tradeoffs usually matter most.

Explore How It Works

Follow the planning process from consultation through drafting, funding, and the next practical steps.

Explore Ebook

Download the guide for a longer walkthrough you can read at your own pace and revisit later.

Explore Main Blog

Browse more practical articles, comparisons, and next-step guidance across the full UltraTrust blog.

What people usually compare next

Most readers compare structure, timing, control, and the practical next step after narrowing the issue in the article above.

What usually makes the answer more specific

Actual ownership, funding, current exposure, and how much control someone wants to keep usually matter more than labels in isolation.

When another step helps more than another article

Once timing, structure, and next steps start overlapping, it often helps to talk through the sequence instead of trying to compare everything mentally.

Questions readers usually ask next

Clear answers make it easier to compare structure, timing, control, and the next step that fits best.

What usually matters most before moving ahead with a trust-based protection plan?

Most people get the clearest answer by looking at timing, current ownership, funding, and how much control they want to keep. Those points usually shape the next step more than labels alone.

How do readers usually decide which related page to read next?

Most readers move next to the page that answers the practical question left open after the article, whether that is lawsuit exposure, business-owner risk, trust structure, cost, or how the process works.

When does it help to compare more than one structure instead of stopping with one article?

It usually helps as soon as the decision involves more than one concern at the same time, such as protection, control, taxes, family planning, or business exposure. That is when side-by-side comparison becomes more useful than reading in isolation.

What makes the next step feel more practical and less theoretical?

The next step feels more practical once the discussion turns to actual assets, ownership, timing, and the sequence of decisions that would need to happen in real life.

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