Estate Planning And The Revocable
Living Trust
by David Hallstrom
from ezinearticles.com
According to Plan-My-Estate.com - With a
Revocable Living Trust, you transfer the title of any of your
assets (such as a house) from yourself as an individual, to
yourself as Trustee of the Trust. Then you, as the Trustee
of the Trust, manage the assets of the Trust for the benefit
of the beneficiary, which is you. In this manner, you keep
complete control over the assets. Once you pass on, a Successor
Trustee takes over the management of the asssets for the benefit
of the beneficiaries that you named in your Trust. Your assets
do not have to pass through Probate because the assets are
no longer titled in your name as an individual, but are now
titled in the name of the trust. Upon your death, the Successor
Trustee simply transfers your assets directly to your beneficiaries
without the need for court or attorney's fees or costs.
With a Revocable Living Trust you keep complete control over
your assets and ensure that your assets are passed to your
designated beneficiaries without delay or unnecessary costs.
Why use a revocable living trust as part of your
estate planning strategy?
1. Assets funded into the trust avoid probate. This can save
your beneficiaries time and money and if there is no probate,
there is probably no public record of the distribution of
assets. Note, however, that only the assets written into the
trust agreement are covered by the trust. If you win the lottery
today and die tomorrow without amending the trust, the winning
proceeds will not be covered and may have to be run through
probate.
2. You decide when and what principal and or income will
be passed to which beneficiaries and for what purposes the
income or principal can be distributed, ie: so and so can
only use the money for educational purposes. If it's not used
for educational purposes by a certain date then it goes to
another beneficiary. Or, the income from the trust is to go
to your current spouse and when she dies or remarries or what
ever condition you wish to add, the assets are to be distributed
to your children, or your children are to recieve the income
from the trust untill they reach a certain age and then the
assets are to be distributed as set up in the trust.
3. The trust's assets are normally protected from the beneficiary's
creditors as the trust owns the assets not the beneficiary.
Note: The trust's assets are not normally protected from your
creditors. Because a living trust is revocable your creditors
can usually go after the assets.
You should consult with an attorney who specializes
in estate planning.
While a living trust can offer many advantages in addition
to the foregoing, it also has various disadvantages. The advantages
and disadvantages can depend on both your financial and personal
situation. A good attorney will go over your both your financial
and personal situations and then provide you with proper advice
about planning and protecting your estate and assets.
David G. Hallstrom, Sr. is not an attorney and the foregoing
information is not given as legal advice. It is instead given
as information and opinion gathered and developed through
experience over the last thirty years as a private investigator
dealing almost exclusivly with attorneys. The author also
interviewed various estate planning attorneys prior to writing
this article. Although the author believes the information
to be accurate no guarantee is made or implied. As in all
legal matters the advice of a competent attorney should be
sought when planning or attempting to protect your estate.
This article may be reprinted, at no charge, provided that
credit is given to the author and that any links contained
herein are retained and kept active.
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