Fiduciary (Trust and Estate)

The Illinois Income Tax is imposed on every taxpayer earning or receiving income in Illinois or as a resident of Illinois. The tax is calculated by multiplying net income by a flat rate. The Illinois Income Tax is based, to a large extent, on the federal income tax code.

Replacement Tax, also known as Personal Property Replacement Tax, is a tax on the net income of corporations, subchapter S corporations, partnerships, and trusts. This tax replaces money lost by local governments when their power to impose personal property taxes was taken away. Replacement tax is collected from corporations, subchapter S corporations, partnerships, and trusts by the State of Illinois and paid to local governments.

Tax rate

Trusts and estates must pay a business income tax. Trusts also pay a replacement tax. Use the Tax Rate Database to determine the tax rates applied to trusts and estates.

Income from a trust or estate is often passed on to beneficiaries who, in turn, must report this income on their federal income tax returns. This income is included in federal adjusted gross income (for individual beneficiaries), which is the starting point for the Illinois Individual Income Tax, or federal taxable income (for other beneficiaries).

Tax base

The starting point for the Illinois Fiduciary and Replacement Tax is federal taxable income, which is income minus deductions. Next, the federal taxable income is changed by adding back certain items ( e.g ., state, municipal, and other interest income excluded from federal taxable income) and subtracting others ( e.g. , interest income from U.S. Treasury obligations). The result is “base income.”

See the Illinois Department of Revenue Income Tax Credits and Expiration s spreadsheet for information about income tax credits.

Filing requirements

You must file Form IL-1041, Fiduciary Income and Replacement Tax Return , if you are a fiduciary of a trust or an estate and the trust or the estate

Note: "Grantor" trusts are not required to file Form IL-1041.

If the trust is a charitable organization exempt from federal income tax by reason of the IRC, Section 501(a), it is not required to file Form IL-1041. However, unrelated business taxable income, as determined under IRC, Section 512, is subject to tax (without any deduction for the Illinois income tax) and must be reported on Form IL-990-T, Exempt Organization Income and Replacement Tax Return , instead of Form IL-1041. For more information see Form IL-990-T Instructions.

Due dates

Original return

Automatic filing extension

You are not required to file a form to obtain this automatic extension. However, if you expect tax to be due, you must pay any tentative tax due by the original due date of the return to avoid interest and penalty on tax not paid . An extension of time to file your Form IL-1041 does not extend the amount of time to pay your Illinois tax liability. See Make a Payment for payment options.

For amended returns claiming a credit or refund filed on or after June 25, 2021, IDOR has an automatic six month extension of time to issue an assessment of additional tax due if the amended return is filed within six months of the original expiration of the statute of limitations.