[caption id="attachment_2283" align="alignright" width="300"] A Closer Look at Trusts[/caption] I admit it: Legal terminology is confusing. Not only are some words foreign outside of the estate planning world, but sometimes “normal” words carry a legal definition you would have never guessed. And sometimes, the same legal concept has more than one phrase used to describe it. Take “Living Trust” and “Revocable Trust” and “Revocable Living Trust,” for example – all three of these terms are used to describe the exact same thing. And the term “Irrevocable Trust” is used to describe many different things. (Confused yet?) So what is a trust?
In one sentence, a trust is an entity that can hold assets.
More specifically, a Revocable Living Trust is designed as follows:- You can revoke it, amend it, update it, rewrite it – you have full control. When you set up a Revocable Living Trust and move your assets into it, you still retain full control over these assets.
- You create it while you’re alive. This is in contrast to a trust that comes into being only through a last will and testament, i.e., the trust doesn’t exist until you’ve passed – this is called a testamentary trust.
- An entity that can hold assets.
Trusts – both revocable trusts and irrevocable trusts – are very efficient tools to help any family or individual avoid the probate court, no matter how much you have or whether you have children. I don’t like the notion that “only if you have at least $X in net worth then a trust is right for you” – because you can ask twenty different people what that number is and you’ll get twenty different answers.“But trusts are only for the rich, right?”
If you don’t want your family to have to deal with the headache of the court system after you pass, then a trust is right for you.
How does an Irrevocable Trust fit into the picture? The concept is the same – this is an entity separate from you that can hold your assets. But with an Irrevocable Trust, you lose most or all control over the trust and the trust property after you set it up, hence the word “irrevocable.” You might set up an Irrevocable Trust to minimize estate tax or to achieve charitable giving goals. The IRS has very specific rules on how an Irrevocable Trust can minimize or eliminate the tax owed by your estate and it is important work with an experienced estate planning attorney when utilizing irrevocable trusts. What’s the bottom line? Should you use a Revocable Living Trust, Irrevocable Trust, neither, both…? Regardless of what a trust is named, the terms and provisions contained in the actual written trust agreement dictate how the trust will be administered and managed for your children and other beneficiaries. The name of the trust is for colloquial reference only and usually has no legal meaning separate from the terms in the document itself. The bottom line is that trusts are a magnificent tool for avoiding probate and minimizing taxes, as long as the trust is drafted by a competent, experienced attorney who you trust and who knows the right questions to ask so they can see the big picture. Authored by: Bonnie Bowles, Estate Planning Attorney & Organized MomThe blog post Trusts, in Plain English is republished from Wills and Wellness
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