OBBBA business owner tax Q&A highlights real scenarios from entrepreneurs dealing with PTET elections, multi-state issues, trusts, and estate considerations.
The Q&A segment pulls together everything discussed during the event and applies it to real situations submitted by business owners. Laura moderates while Charles, Lee, and Stanton jump in with tax, insurance, estate, and M&A perspectives. The result is a practical look at how OBBBA plays out in multi-state, multi-entity, real-world scenarios.
Several questions focus on pass-through entity tax (PTET) and state elections. Laura explains that:
These issues frequently come up in our OBBBA business owner tax Q&A sessions because state rules vary widely and impact planning timelines.
The main takeaway is that PTET can be powerful under OBBBA, but it is not a one-size-fits-all tool. You need state-by-state analysis before assuming it will help.
For official IRS guidance on when state & local taxes are deductible (which underpins PTET strategy), see the IRS Topic No. 503 – Deductible Taxes.
Another set of questions dives into 1031 exchanges and inheritance/estate taxes. One example involves selling a property in one state, using a 1031 to buy in another, and then worrying about the original state’s inheritance tax later on.
Laura and Stanton explain that the key questions are:
A properly structured trust (such as a SLAT) may keep the property outside the taxable estate, but the details matter. Stanton emphasizes that if there is any doubt, counsel should confirm how that state treats the specific trust and exchange structure.
Questions also arise around existing structures that were not designed with OBBBA in mind, such as:
Laura and Stanton outline why these structures can create both income-tax and estate-tax friction and why owners should not assume they can “quickly” unwind them later. Sometimes there are options to restructure over time, but often it takes multi-year planning to reduce damage.
Charles addresses questions about premium-financed life insurance – when banks finance large policy premiums for high-net-worth clients. He explains that:
The point is not that premium finance is “good” or “bad,” but that it should only be used by clients who understand the moving parts and have the balance sheet to support it.
Across many questions, one theme keeps coming up: timing. The panel repeatedly reminds owners that:
The Q&A reinforces that OBBBA is less about a single “magic” provision and more about using a combination of tools – entities, trusts, insurance, exits – in the right order over time.
The session closes with a reminder from Laura: you don’t need to implement everything at once. Start with one or two high-impact moves that fit your situation, and build from there with a coordinated advisory team.
This summary is educational only and not individual tax, legal, or investment advice.