Delaware Realty Transfer Tax Calculator
Calculate state and county transfer taxes for Delaware real property transactions. Delaware's 4% state transfer tax is among the highest in the nation.
DE Realty Transfer Tax Calculator
State transfer tax: 4% (split 2.5% seller / 1.5% buyer) plus county tax
DING Trust State Income Tax Savings Estimator
Estimate potential state income tax savings from a Delaware Incomplete Non-Grantor (DING) trust for residents of high-tax states.
DING Trust Savings Estimator
Delaware Incomplete Non-Grantor Trust: eliminate state income tax on trust investment income
Delaware Trust & Estate Planning Guide
Comprehensive analysis of Delaware's trust advantages, asset protection, DING trusts, dynasty planning, transfer taxes, and the Court of Chancery.
Delaware Trust Advantages Overview
Delaware has earned its reputation as the premier trust jurisdiction in the United States through decades of progressive trust legislation, a specialized court system, and a deep body of precedent. I regularly advise clients on leveraging Delaware's trust-friendly framework for multi-generational wealth planning.
No State Income Tax on Non-Resident Trust Income
Delaware does not impose income tax on trust income where the trust has no Delaware-resident beneficiaries and the trust income is not sourced from Delaware. For trusts established by non-residents with a Delaware corporate trustee, investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains) generally escapes state income taxation entirely. This makes Delaware an ideal situs for trusts holding liquid investment portfolios.
Perpetual Dynasty Trusts
Delaware abolished the Rule Against Perpetuities for personal property trusts under 25 Del. C. § 503(a). This means trusts created under Delaware law can last indefinitely, allowing wealth to compound and pass through unlimited generations without exposure to estate or generation-skipping transfer taxes at each generational level.
Directed Trust Statute
Delaware's directed trust statute 12 Del. C. Ch. 33A is among the most comprehensive in the nation. It allows the trust instrument to appoint:
- Investment Direction Advisors who control investment decisions, relieving the trustee of investment liability
- Distribution Direction Advisors who direct distribution decisions to or among beneficiaries
- Trust Protectors who hold administrative and modification powers, including the ability to change situs, amend administrative provisions, add or remove beneficiaries, and convert between grantor and non-grantor trust status
Silent Trust Provisions
Under 12 Del. C. § 3303, a trust instrument may waive or modify the trustee's duty to inform and report to beneficiaries. This "silent trust" provision allows grantors to prevent beneficiaries from learning about the trust's existence or terms until a specified age or event. This is particularly valuable for families concerned about the impact of known wealth on younger generations' motivation and development.
Decanting
Delaware's decanting statute 12 Del. C. § 3528 permits a trustee with discretionary distribution authority to transfer trust assets into a new trust with modified terms without court approval. This provides a mechanism to:
- Update trust terms to reflect changes in tax law
- Correct drafting errors or ambiguities
- Change trust situs or governing law
- Add or modify trust protector provisions
- Modify distribution standards for changed family circumstances
Court of Chancery
Delaware's Court of Chancery provides expert adjudication of trust and fiduciary disputes by experienced chancellors who specialize in equity, corporate, and trust law. The absence of jury trials means cases are decided by sophisticated jurists, resulting in predictable, well-reasoned outcomes. This judicial infrastructure is a significant advantage over states where trust disputes may be decided by general jurisdiction courts with limited trust law experience.
Delaware Asset Protection Trust (DAPT)
Delaware was one of the first states to enact domestic asset protection trust legislation, codified in 12 Del. C. Ch. 35 (the Qualified Dispositions in Trust Act). I advise clients on whether a Delaware DAPT is appropriate based on their specific creditor exposure profile and domicile state.
Self-Settled Asset Protection
Under traditional trust law, a grantor cannot create a spendthrift trust for their own benefit and shield assets from creditors. Delaware changed this rule. A DAPT allows the grantor to be a discretionary beneficiary of their own irrevocable trust while protecting trust assets from the grantor's future creditors. This is a powerful planning tool for professionals in high-liability fields (physicians, real estate developers, business owners).
4-Year Lookback Period
For creditors whose claims existed before the transfer to the DAPT, Delaware imposes a 4-year statute of limitations. Specifically:
- Existing creditors have 4 years from the date of the qualified disposition to bring a fraudulent transfer claim
- Alternatively, they have 1 year from the date the transfer was or could reasonably have been discovered, whichever is later
- After the lookback period expires, existing creditor claims are barred
- Future creditors (claims arising after the transfer) generally cannot reach trust assets
- Child support and alimony obligations are exceptions and cannot be avoided through a DAPT
Qualified Trustee Requirement
The DAPT must have at least one qualified trustee who is either:
- An individual resident of Delaware (other than the grantor)
- A Delaware entity (bank, trust company, or other entity authorized under Delaware law)
The qualified trustee must maintain or have custody of some trust property in Delaware and must maintain trust records in Delaware.
Cannot Defraud Existing Creditors
Critically, a DAPT cannot be used to defraud known existing creditors. If the transfer is made with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor, or if the grantor was insolvent at the time of transfer (or rendered insolvent by the transfer), the transfer may be set aside under Delaware's fraudulent transfer law. The DAPT protects against future claims — it is not a tool for evading existing obligations.
Multi-State DAPT Comparison
| State | Lookback Period | Trust Duration | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delaware | 4 years | Perpetual | Court of Chancery, extensive case law |
| Nevada | 2 years | 365 years | Strongest self-settled trust protections |
| South Dakota | 2 years | Perpetual | No state income tax, strong privacy |
| Wyoming | Undetermined | 1,000 years | Lowest cost, newest statute |
| Alaska | 4 years | 1,000 years | First DAPT state (1997) |
Related Resource: For international asset protection trust planning (Cook Islands, Nevis, Belize), see my Foreign Asset Protection Trusts Guide, which compares offshore and domestic options.
DING Trust: Delaware Incomplete Non-Grantor Trust
The DING trust is one of the most sophisticated state income tax planning vehicles available. I explain the structure, mechanics, and critical limitations including the California SB 131 issue that has closed this strategy for California residents.
Structure and Mechanics
A DING trust is an irrevocable trust established under Delaware law with the following key structural features:
- Incomplete Gift: The grantor retains sufficient powers (typically a limited testamentary power of appointment among a class of beneficiaries, plus the power to substitute assets of equivalent value) so that the transfer is treated as an "incomplete gift" for federal gift tax purposes. No gift tax is due on funding.
- Non-Grantor Trust for State Tax: Despite the retained powers, the trust is structured so that it is treated as a non-grantor trust for state income tax purposes. This means the trust (not the grantor) is the taxpayer.
- Delaware Situs: With a Delaware trustee and Delaware situs, the trust's investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains) is not subject to state income tax because Delaware does not tax non-resident trust income.
Federal Tax Treatment
- Gift Tax: No gift tax because the gift is incomplete (grantor retains sufficient powers)
- Income Tax: The trust is a grantor trust for federal income tax purposes, so income is reported on the grantor's federal return. This is the key distinction — for federal purposes, the grantor pays the tax; for state purposes, the trust is the taxpayer.
- Estate Tax: With proper structuring, trust assets may be excluded from the grantor's estate (though this depends on the specific powers retained and IRS scrutiny is increasing)
Who Benefits from a DING Trust?
DING trusts are most beneficial for residents of high-income-tax states who have significant investment income. The primary candidates include residents of:
- New York (10.9%) — currently the primary market for DING trusts
- New Jersey (10.75%) — significant savings potential
- Minnesota (9.85%) — effective for high-income taxpayers
- Oregon (9.9%) — particularly for capital gains income
- Massachusetts (9% with surtax) — new surtax makes DING trusts more attractive
- Connecticut (6.99%) — moderate but meaningful savings on large portfolios
California enacted SB 131 (Revenue & Taxation Code § 17082), effective January 1, 2023, which specifically provides that the income of an incomplete gift non-grantor trust is taxable to the California resident grantor. This legislation was surgically designed to eliminate the DING trust strategy for California residents. If you are a California resident, a DING trust will not save you California income tax. I advise California clients to explore alternative strategies.
New York Considerations
New York remains the largest market for DING trusts, but practitioners should be aware of increasing scrutiny. The New York Department of Taxation and Finance has issued guidance (TSB-A-15(4)I) acknowledging that properly structured DING trusts can avoid New York income tax, but the IRS position on the federal side (particularly regarding estate inclusion) continues to evolve. Private letter rulings (including PLR 200148028 and PLR 200729005) have addressed various aspects of incomplete gift trust structures.
IRS Scrutiny
The IRS has increased scrutiny of DING trusts in recent years. Key considerations include:
- The IRS may challenge the characterization of the gift as "incomplete" if the retained powers are insufficient
- Estate inclusion under IRC §§ 2036 or 2038 is a risk if the grantor retains too much control
- Obtaining a private letter ruling is recommended but not required
- Proper drafting by experienced trust counsel is essential
Delaware Dynasty Trust Planning
Delaware's abolition of the Rule Against Perpetuities makes it the premier jurisdiction for dynasty trust planning. I help clients structure perpetual trusts that preserve wealth across unlimited generations with maximum tax efficiency.
No Rule Against Perpetuities
Under 25 Del. C. § 503(a), Delaware has abolished the Rule Against Perpetuities for personal property held in trust. This means:
- Trusts can last indefinitely — there is no maximum duration
- Real property in Delaware is also exempt from RAP restrictions
- Trusts created in other states can be migrated to Delaware through decanting or trust modification to take advantage of perpetual duration
GST Exemption Allocation Strategy
The generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax exemption is the key to dynasty trust planning. Here is how the allocation works:
- The grantor allocates their GST exemption ($13.61 million in 2024 / $13.99 million in 2025) to the dynasty trust on a timely filed Form 709 (gift tax return)
- Once allocated, the trust has an "inclusion ratio" of zero, meaning all distributions to skip persons (grandchildren and below) are GST-tax-free
- All future growth, income, and appreciation inside the trust compounds free of GST tax
- In a perpetual trust, this tax-free compounding can shelter hundreds of millions (or billions) of dollars over multiple generations
Directed Trust Structure
I typically recommend structuring Delaware dynasty trusts as directed trusts under 12 Del. C. Ch. 33A:
- Corporate Trustee (Delaware trust company) handles administrative duties, custody, and tax reporting
- Investment Direction Advisor (family member, family office, or investment advisor) makes investment decisions — this keeps investment control within the family
- Distribution Direction Advisor (family member or trusted advisor) directs distributions to beneficiaries based on evolving family needs
- Trust Protector adapts the trust to changing laws, family circumstances, and tax environments over the trust's perpetual duration
Trust Protector Powers
For a dynasty trust designed to last indefinitely, the trust protector role is critical. Typical powers include:
- Amending administrative and investment provisions
- Changing trust situs and governing law
- Adding or removing beneficiaries
- Converting between grantor and non-grantor trust status
- Modifying distribution standards
- Replacing trustees and advisors
- Vetoing distributions
Multi-State Dynasty Trust Comparison
| State | Maximum Trust Duration | State Income Tax | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delaware | Perpetual | None on non-resident trusts | Court of Chancery, directed trusts |
| South Dakota | Perpetual | None | No state income tax at all, strong privacy |
| Florida | 1,000 years (360yr trust rule) | None | No state income tax, large trust bar |
| Arizona | 500 years | 2.5% flat | Community property trust, low cost |
| California | 90 years | Up to 13.3% | Large trust bar, but poor trust situs |
| New York | Varies (lives in being + 21) | Up to 10.9% | Major financial center, but high taxes |
Delaware Transfer Tax & Real Property
While Delaware excels as a trust jurisdiction, its realty transfer tax is among the highest in the nation. I help clients understand and plan for the 4% state transfer tax plus county taxes on real property transactions.
State Transfer Tax: 4%
Delaware imposes a 4% realty transfer tax on transfers of real property. This rate applies to the full consideration (sale price) or fair market value of the property. The tax is among the highest state transfer tax rates in the United States.
- Standard split: 2.5% from the seller, 1.5% from the buyer
- Customizable: The buyer-seller split can be negotiated and modified by agreement
- Applies to: Deeds, transfers of controlling interests in entities holding real property, and certain long-term leases
County Transfer Tax
Each of Delaware's three counties imposes an additional 1.5% transfer tax:
- New Castle County: 1.5% (additional)
- Kent County: 1.5% (additional)
- Sussex County: 1.5% (additional)
Combined state + county rate is typically 5.5% for most residential transactions in all three counties.
First-Time Homebuyer Program
First-time homebuyers in Delaware may qualify for a realty transfer tax credit under the Delaware State Housing Authority (DSHA) program. Key requirements include:
- Buyer must not have owned a home in the past 3 years
- Property must be the buyer's primary residence
- Income and purchase price limits may apply depending on the specific program
- The credit can significantly reduce the buyer's 1.5% share of the state transfer tax
Exemptions from Transfer Tax
Certain transfers are exempt from Delaware's realty transfer tax in whole or in part:
- Spousal transfers: Transfers between spouses are generally exempt
- Divorce transfers: Transfers incident to a divorce decree are exempt
- Family death transfers: Transfers to certain family members upon death may be exempt from the county portion of the transfer tax
- Government transfers: Transfers to or from governmental entities
- Charitable transfers: Transfers to qualified charitable organizations
- Trust transfers: Certain transfers involving trusts where beneficial ownership does not change (e.g., transfers to a revocable living trust)
- Nominal consideration: Transfers for $0 or nominal consideration may still be taxed on fair market value — consult before assuming an exemption applies
Planning Considerations
Given the high combined transfer tax rate (5.5%), real property planning in Delaware requires careful consideration:
- Structure entity transfers carefully — transfers of controlling interests in entities holding Delaware real property trigger transfer tax
- Consider holding periods and exit strategies when acquiring Delaware investment property
- Negotiate the buyer-seller split as part of the purchase agreement
- Factor the 5.5% rate into investment property return calculations
Court of Chancery & Trust Administration
The Delaware Court of Chancery is one of the most significant advantages of establishing trust situs in Delaware. I consider the availability of this court system a major factor when recommending Delaware over competing trust jurisdictions.
Expert Court for Trust and Entity Disputes
Established in 1792, the Court of Chancery is a dedicated equity court that handles corporate governance, trust, fiduciary, and partnership disputes. Key features:
- No jury trials: All cases are decided by the chancellor and four vice-chancellors, who are experienced equity judges with deep expertise in trust, fiduciary, and entity law
- Specialized expertise: The judges handle trust and entity disputes daily, resulting in sophisticated and well-reasoned opinions
- Extensive precedent: Over 200 years of trust and equity jurisprudence provides predictability that no other state can match
- Expedited proceedings: The court can accommodate expedited schedules for urgent trust matters, including temporary restraining orders and injunctions
Privacy Protections
Trust proceedings in the Court of Chancery can be conducted with significant privacy protections:
- Trust accountings and inventories are not public records
- Parties can seek confidential treatment of sensitive financial information
- Settlement agreements can remain sealed
- Compared to states where probate records are entirely public, Delaware offers meaningful privacy for high-net-worth families
Why This Matters for Trust Planning
For trusts designed to last perpetually (dynasty trusts), disputes are inevitable over decades and centuries. Having access to the Court of Chancery means:
- Trust construction disputes are resolved by judges who understand complex trust instruments
- Fiduciary duty claims against trustees are evaluated against a well-developed body of law
- Trust modification and reformation petitions are handled by judges familiar with modern trust law
- Investment standard disputes (prudent investor rule) benefit from sophisticated judicial analysis
- Trust decanting disputes have meaningful precedent to guide outcomes
Trust Administration in Delaware
Delaware's trust administration framework is designed for efficiency:
- No registration requirement: Delaware does not require trusts to be registered with a court or government agency
- Flexible trustee succession: Trust instruments can provide for trustee succession without court involvement
- Nonjudicial settlement agreements: Under 12 Del. C. § 3338, interested parties can resolve trust disputes through nonjudicial settlement agreements without court approval
- Virtual representation: Delaware's virtual representation statute allows fewer parties to bind the interests of future or unascertainable beneficiaries, simplifying trust proceedings
Delaware Estate & Gift Tax FAQ
Frequently asked questions about Delaware estate tax, trust planning, DAPTs, DING trusts, transfer taxes, and the Court of Chancery.
Schedule a Delaware Trust Planning Consultation
I'm Sergei Tokmakov, Esq. I advise clients nationwide on Delaware trust structures, DAPTs, DING trusts, and dynasty trust planning at $240/hr.
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