Form 1041-N Filing Guide for Tax Year 2020
Overview of Form 1041-N for Electing Alaska Native
Settlement Trusts
Form 1041-N serves as the specialized U.S. Income Tax Return for Electing Alaska Native
Settlement Trusts that have made an irrevocable election under Internal Revenue Code Section
646. This form provides substantial tax advantages for qualifying Alaska Native Settlement
Trusts, including a flat 10% tax rate on ordinary income and a 0% rate on adjusted net capital
gain. These preferential rates distinguish Form 1041-N from standard trust taxation,
underscoring the importance of precise compliance.
Tax Year 2020 Tax Law Environment
For tax year 2020, electing Alaska Native Settlement Trusts continues to benefit from provisions
established by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the 2%
floor remain suspended through 2025, eliminating deductions for investment advisory fees, tax
preparation fees, and certain other administrative expenses. The Qualified Business Income
deduction remains available, allowing trusts to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income
from certain trades or businesses using Form 8995 or Form 8995-A.
Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income provisions apply to trusts that are U.S. shareholders of
controlled foreign corporations, requiring reporting using Form 8992. The Section 965 transition
tax on deferred foreign income continues to affect trusts with interests in specified foreign
corporations. The definition of capital assets excludes certain patents, inventions, models,
designs, and secret formulas or processes for dispositions after 2017, consistent with the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act changes.
Filing Requirements and Deadlines
For calendar year 2020, Form 1041-N must be filed by April 15, 2021. Trusts operating on a
fiscal year must file by the 15th day of the fourth month following the close of the tax year.
Extensions can be requested using Form 7004, which provides an automatic five-month
extension. Filing deadlines are automatically extended when they fall on a Saturday, Sunday, or
a federal or state legal holiday.
The Section 646 election is made by filing Form 1041-N in the trust’s first taxable year and
remains irrevocable for all subsequent years. Trusts must file if they have a gross income of
$600 or more or any taxable income for the year. Once made, the election provides permanent
favorable tax treatment and cannot be revoked.
Ten-Step Filing Checklist for Form 1041-N Tax Year 2020
Step 1: Verify Election Status and Trust Eligibility
Confirm that the Alaska Native Settlement Trust qualifies under Section 3(t) of the Alaska Native
Claims Settlement Act and that the Section 646 election has been properly made. For initial
filings, signing and filing Form 1041-N constitutes the irrevocable election under Section
646(c)(2). Verify that an Alaska Native Corporation sponsors the trust and that all eligibility
requirements continue to be satisfied for 2020. Determine whether the file is a final return,
amended return, or standard annual filing.Step 2: Collect Income Documentation and Trust Information
Gather the trust’s Employer Identification Number and verify the accuracy of trustee information.
Collect all income documents, including Forms 1099-INT for interest income, 1099-DIV for
dividend income, 1099-B for securities transactions, and Schedule K-1 forms from partnerships
or S corporations. Obtain documentation of any property or income assignments received from
the sponsoring Alaska Native Corporation during 2020, including complete asset descriptions,
dates of receipt, and fair market values at the time of transfer.Step 3: Complete Part I General Information
Enter the trust’s legal name, exactly as registered with the IRS, on line 1, and the employer
identification number on line 2. Provide the trustee’s name and title on line 3a, with the complete
mailing address on lines 3b and 3c. Enter the name of the sponsoring Alaska Native
Corporation on line 4. Answer whether Form 1041 was filed in the prior year on line 5. Check
applicable boxes on line 6 for amended return, final return, change in fiduciary’s name, or
change in fiduciary’s address if these situations apply to the 2020 filing.Step 4: Report Interest and Dividend Income
Enter total interest income on line 1a of Part II. Report tax-exempt interest separately on line 1b
without including it in line 1a. Enter total ordinary dividends on line 2a from box 1a of Forms
1099-DIV received during the tax year. Report qualified dividends on line 2b from box 1b of
Forms 1099-DIV. Qualified dividends must satisfy specific holding period requirements and
corporate status conditions to qualify for preferential 0% capital gains rate treatment under
Schedule D Part IV calculations.Step 5: Calculate and Report Capital Gains and Losses Using Schedule D
Complete Schedule D to report all capital gains and losses from sales or exchanges of capital
assets. Schedule D consists of four parts. Part I reports short-term capital gains and losses for
assets held one year or less. Part II reports long-term capital gains and losses for assets held
more than one year. Part III summarizes the contents of Parts I and II. Part IV calculates tax
using maximum capital gains rates when applicable.In Part I, list each short-term transaction with complete details, including property description,
acquisition date, sale date, sales price, and cost basis. Enter short-term capital gain or loss from
other forms or schedules on line 2 and short-term capital loss carryover on line 3. Calculate net
short-term capital gain or loss on line 4.In Part II, list each long-term transaction with complete transaction details. Enter long-term
capital gain or loss from other forms on line 6, capital gain distributions on line 7, and gains from
Form 4797 on line 8 if applicable. Enter long-term capital loss carryover on line 9 and calculate
net long-term capital gain or loss on line 10.In Part III, combine lines 4 and 10 on line 11. If line 11 shows a gain, enter it on page 1, line 3,
and complete Part IV if the trust has qualified dividends or net capital gain. If line 11 shows a
loss, enter on line 12 the smaller of the loss or $3,000 in parentheses. This amount can be
offset against other income on page 1, line 3. Capital losses exceeding $3,000 must be carried
forward to future years using the Capital Loss Carryover Worksheet provided in the instructions.Step 6: Report Other Income and Calculate Total Income
Report any other income on line 4 of Part II, including business income, rental income, farm
income, or income from other sources not previously reported. List the type and amount of each
income source. Add lines 1a, 2a, 3, and 4 to calculate total income and enter the result on line
5.Step 7: Calculate Allowable Deductions
Enter taxes paid on line 6, trustee fees on line 7, and attorney, accountant, and return preparer
fees on line 8. Report other deductions not subject to the 2% floor on line 9 with an attached
schedule detailing each deduction type and amount. Note that miscellaneous itemized
deductions subject to the 2% floor remain suspended for 2020 and cannot be deducted under
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions. Line 10 is reserved for future use and must be left blank.Enter the exemption amount on line 11. If the trust’s governing instrument requires all income to
be distributed currently to beneficiaries, enter $300. Otherwise, enter $100. Add lines 6 through
11 and enter total deductions on line 12. The trust cannot claim an income distribution deduction
under Section 661, a fundamental limitation that distinguishes Alaska Native Settlement Trusts
from other trust types.Step 8: Determine Taxable Income and Compute Tax Liability
Subtract line 12 from line 5 and enter taxable income on line 13. If line 13 is zero or shows a
loss, enter zero on line 14. If line 13 is positive and the trust has no qualified dividends or net
capital gain, multiply line 13 by 10% and enter the result on line 14.If the trust has qualified dividends or net capital gain and line 13 is positive, check the Schedule
D box on line 14 and complete Part IV of Schedule D to calculate tax using the preferential 0%
capital gains rate. Enter the tax from Schedule D, Part I, V, line 28 on page 1, line 14.Step 9: Apply Credits and Calculate Total Tax and Payments
Enter any allowable credits on line 15, specifying the credit type and attaching required credit
forms. Credits must be those allowed under Internal Revenue Code chapters applicable to
trusts. Subtract line 15 from line 14 and enter the result on line 16. Line 17 is reserved for future
use. Add lines 16 and 17 to calculate the total tax and enter it on line 18.Enter any current year net Section 965 tax liability from Form 965-A Part II column k on line 19 if
the trust has deferred foreign income subject to transition tax. Enter total payments on line 20,
including 2020 estimated tax payments made throughout the year, federal income tax withheld
from Forms 1099, and payments made with Form 7004 extension requests.Compare line 20 to the total of lines 18 and 19. If line 20 is smaller, enter the tax due on line 21.
If line 20 is larger, enter the overpayment on line 22. For overpayments, indicate on line 23a the
amount to be credited to the 2021 estimated tax or on line 23b the amount to be refunded to the
trust.- Full IRS transcript retrieval (Wage & Income + Account)
- Professional tax form review
- Preparation & filing support
- Tax relief options if you owe the IRS
Step 10: Complete Schedule K and Part III Other Information
Complete Schedule K to report distributions to beneficiaries using the four-tier distribution
system established under IRC Section 646(e). For each beneficiary, provide complete
information, including name, street address, city, state, ZIP code, and Social Security number, in
columns a and b. Report Tier I distributions under Section 646(e)(1) in column c, Tier II
distributions under Section 646(e)(2) in column d, Tier III distributions under Section 646(e)(3) in
column e, and Tier IV distributions under Section 646(e)(4) in column f. Calculate and enter total
distributions in column g by adding amounts in columns c through f. Attach additional pages of
Schedule K if more space is needed for multiple beneficiaries.Answer all five questions in Part III Other Information completely and accurately. Question 1
asks whether the trust received property or an assignment of income from an Alaska Native
Corporation during the tax year. If so, please attach a schedule with complete details of each
asset received, including the date distributed and its fair market value on the date of receipt.Question 2 addresses whether the trust received a distribution from or was the grantor or
transferor to a foreign trust. Question 3 asks whether the trust had an interest in or signature
authority over a financial account in a foreign country, requiring the entry of the foreign country's
name if so. Question 4 asks whether the trust was a specified domestic entity required to file
Form 8938 for the tax year. Question 5 provides a checkbox to make a Section 643(e)(3)
election to recognize gain on property distributed in kind to beneficiaries.Sign and date the return in the designated signature block. The trustee or an officer
representing the trustee must sign under penalties of perjury, certifying that the return is true,
correct, and complete. For initial Form 1041-N filings, this signature constitutes the Section 646
election statement. If a paid preparer completed the return, the preparer must sign in the Paid
Preparer Use Only section and provide their Preparer Tax Identification Number, preparer’s
signature, date, firm name, firm Employer Identification Number, firm address, and phone
number.Important Limitations and Restrictions
Electing Alaska Native Settlement Trusts cannot claim the income distribution deduction
available to other trusts under Section 661. This fundamental distinction has a significant impact
on tax computation. Capital losses are limited to $3,000 per year against other income, with
excess losses carried forward to subsequent years using the Capital Loss Carryover Worksheet.Miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the 2% floor are suspended through 2025,
eliminating certain administrative expense deductions. The exemption amount is restricted to
either $300 or $100, depending on whether all income must be distributed currently under the
trust instrument.Schedule D and Schedule K Requirements
Schedule D serves as the capital gains and losses schedule for Form 1041-N and must be
attached when the trust has capital transactions. Schedule D Part I reports short-term
transactions, Part II reports long-term transactions, Part III summarizes the capital gain or loss,
and Part IV calculates tax using maximum capital gains rates when the trust has qualified
dividends or net capital gain. The four-part structure provides comprehensive reporting of all
capital asset dispositions.Schedule K reports distributions to beneficiaries using the four-tier system based on IRC
Section 646(e). Tier I distributions represent income required to be distributed currently. Tier II
distributions represent amounts that would have been Tier I distributions in prior years when a
Section 646 election was in effect. Tier III distributions represent other amounts that have been
properly paid, credited, or required to be distributed. Tier IV distributions represent all other
amounts paid, credited, or distributed. Each beneficiary must receive the appropriate tier
classification for proper tax reporting. Schedule K must be filed with Form 1041-N and a copy
provided to the sponsoring Alaska Native Corporation.Form Consistency and Filing Information
The December 2020 revision of Form 1041-N maintains the same fundamental structure as the
2019 and prior versions, with Schedule D continuing its four-part format and Schedule K
continuing the four-tier distribution system. Mail completed returns to Department of the
Treasury, Internal Revenue Service, Ogden, UT 84201-0027. Include the Form 1041-V payment
voucher if you're remitting payment by check or money order. Write the trust’s Employer
Identification Number and “Form 1041-N” on any payment to ensure proper credit.The Section 646 election remains irrevocable and applies to all subsequent tax years once
made, making accurate initial filing and ongoing compliance essential for preserving the
favorable 10% ordinary income rate and 0% capital gains rate treatment available exclusively to
electing Alaska Native Settlement Trusts. Proper completion of all required schedules and
accurate reporting of distributions ensures compliance with all applicable tax law requirements
for 2020.If you’re missing tax documents or want to ensure the numbers you enter match IRS records,
we can help.

