5 Tax Efficiency Strategies That High-Net-Worth Families Actually Use

Sam's List Editorial | 2026-06-06

5 Tax Efficiency Strategies That High-Net-Worth Families Actually Use Most tax articles talk about contributing to your IRA and harvesting losses. That's fine for most people. It's not what wealthy families are doing. High-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth families work with advisors who operate in a completely different part of the tax code — structures that require qualified appraisals, irrevocable trusts, and multi-year planning horizons. The strategies below aren't obscure loopholes. They're established planning tools that appear in virtually every sophisticated family wealth plan. These are not DIY moves. They require specialized legal, tax, and financial counsel working together. The goal here is to help you understand what these structures are and why they exist — not to replace the advice of a qualified professional. 1. Charitable Remainder Trusts Convert Appreciated Assets Into Income Streams While Eliminating a Large Portion of the Capital Gain Here's the setup: you have $5 million in low-basis stock — maybe a position from an early startup, a long-held public company, or inherited shares. If you sell it directly, you pay capital gains tax on the full appreciation. On $5M with a

00K basis, that's roughly $750,000–
,000,000 in federal tax before state. A charitable remainder trust (CRT) offers a different path. You transfer the appreciated asset into the trust. The trust sells it without paying capital gains tax, reinvests the proceeds into a diversified portfolio, and pays you an income stream for life (or a term of years). At the end of the trust term, the remaining balance goes to a charity of your choosing. You get a partial charitable deduction in the year of contribution, based on the present value of the eventual charitable remainder. The gain is spread across your income payments over time rather than recognized in a single year. And the charity ultimately receives assets that grew inside the trust tax-free. It's not the right structure for everyone — it requires a genuine charitable intent, and the asset is irrevocable once transferred. But for families with large low-basis positions who would otherwise face a massive tax event, a CRT is one of the most powerful planning tools in existence. 2. Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts Move Future Appreciation Out of Your Taxable Estate When Assets Grow Faster Than the IRS Hurdle Rate A grantor retained annuity trust (GRAT) works on a simple premise: you contribute assets to the trust, receive annuity payments back for a fixed term, and whatever appreciation exceeds the IRS Section 7520...

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