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Use of Living Trusts
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One of the most popular estate planning
instruments today is the revocable living trust.
Trusts are used to maintain control and disposition of assets after death, and
some can be used to minimize the estate tax impact of property transfers.
The difference between a revocable and irrevocable trust is whether the trust
creator can change or terminate the trust. In the revocable trust, the creator
can change the terms and conditions of the trust, or even eliminate the trust
altogether. An irrevocable trust, on the other hand, cannot be altered once
established.
When used and implemented correctly, an irrevocable living trust offers many
benefits.
Using a Living Trust for Financial
Protection
A revocable living trust provides financial protection in the event you are no
longer able to manage your financial affairs yourself. You can be trustee while
you are healthy, but if you have a stroke or become otherwise incapacitated,
your successor trustee would manage your assets in the trust.
Using a Living Trust for Privacy
Another benefit of revocable living trusts is continued privacy because the
instrument will bypass probate. The trust can function like a will, dictating at
what age children are to receive trust assets and the percentage shares of the
distribution. The trust can be linked to a pour-over will, a short document that
names the executor and that determines how taxes, creditors, and final expenses
will be paid. The pour-over will directs the executor to gather all assets not
included in the trust and pour them over into the trust. Once that happens, the
trustee will follow the directions included in the trust. The pour-over will
must be filed with the probate court, but because it doesn't say much, it
doesn't reveal much.
Using a Living Trust to Reduce
Probate
Regarding probate, living trusts offer another useful feature -- if you own
property in a state other than your state of residence, when you die, that
property must go through what's known as an ancillary probate. Many people think
it's worth setting up the trust just to avoid the out-of-state probate hassle,
which necessitates hiring a lawyer in that other state.
Using a Living Trust as a Management
Tool
The living trust can be used as a tool to manage your property, and can be
especially helpful if you become incapacitated because the successor trustee can
manage your property, rather than a court-appointed trustee, which takes time.
The benefit of having an immediate successor can be especially important if you
own a business or other assets that need to be managed seamlessly.
Other Benefits of a Living Trust
Finally, you can include provisions in the trust that preserve the use of your
estate and use the gift tax exclusion to set up other trusts that will help
reduce estate taxes.
Disadvantages of a Living Trust
There are disadvantages to using a revocable living trust as well. You must
re-title assets into the trust name, which entails a lot of paperwork. And,
although creditors only have a limited time after your death to make claims
against your estate while it's being probated, there is no time limit within
which creditors may go after assets in a living trust.
Conclusions
If your goal in using a revocable living trust is only to avoid probate, there
are easier ways to accomplish this task. However, the revocable living trust can
provide a wide variety of estate planning benefits that are difficult to achieve
with any other estate planning tool.
Advisory Services offered through
Envision Investment Advisors, LLC., An SEC Registered Investment Advisory Firm.
(Envision & Crossroads Retirement are not affiliated.)
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