What Trust is Right for You? | Minster Bank
Minster Bank. Bank Close. Go Far.
Open Menu
 

WEALTH

February 18, 2025

What Trust is Right for You?

If you are starting the estate planning process, you may have heard that a trust is a useful legal arrangement for protecting and distributing assets. Let’s look at seven common types of trusts and how they are used. Note that this is a general overview and is not meant to provide specific guidance. You should seek the guidance of a financial professional with estate planning experience to help you decide which trust, if any, is right for your situation.

 

Revocable Living Trust

A revocable living trust gives you flexibility and control over your assets during your lifetime and the ability to change or revoke the trust at any time. It protects your assets if you become incapacitated and can save your loved ones’ time and money, as well as protect their privacy, by making probate unnecessary for asset transfer after you pass away.

Use case examples:

  • A mother creates a revocable living trust to avoid the probate process, ensuring her assets transfer smoothly to her three children while retaining her ability to move assets in and out of the trust as she sees fit.
  • A single man with a family history of Alzheimer’s disease creates a revocable living trust to ensure his nephew, who will serve as the trustee, will manage his assets in case he becomes incapacitated.

 

Irrevocable Trust

Irrevocable trusts bypass the probate process, protect assets from creditors and legal judgements, and reduce the grantor’s tax liability, but they are difficult to change or cancel. Money, property, or other assets that you place into this trust are permanently removed from your estate to be managed and distributed to your beneficiaries by your trustee when you pass away.

Use case examples:

  • A surgeon establishes an irrevocable trust to protect a portion of her assets for her beneficiaries if she ever faces malpractice litigation.
  • Wealthy retirees with a sizeable estate want to leave assets to their children and grandchildren without incurring a significant inheritance tax.

 

Testamentary Trust

Testamentary trusts are established after the grantor passes away, based on instructions left in their will for an executor. A named trustee manages assets on behalf of the beneficiaries until predetermined conditions outlined in the will are met. As with other trusts, the assets do not go through probate.

Use case examples:

  • Parents of four children, ranging in age from 2-15, create a testamentary trust and stipulate that distributions should be made to each of their children based on the children’s ages and specific needs at the time of their passing.
  • A grandmother stipulates that her grandchildren will receive portions of their inheritance at certain ages or milestones – like college graduation, marriage, or the birth of their first child – instead of receiving a lump sum.

 

Special Needs Trust

Sometimes as a supplemental needs trust or SNT, a special needs trust is established to benefit people with a physical or mental disability or a chronic illness. The funds in the trust can be used for whatever the beneficiary needs – commonly for things like home care, medical expenses, and housing and transportation costs. Keeping the funds inside the trust helps ensure that the beneficiary can still qualify for government assistance.

Use case examples:

  • A married couple establishes a special needs trust for their daughter with cerebral palsy that would cover her housing and personal needs without reducing her eligibility for government benefits provided by Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, or Medicaid.
  • A woman who cares for her brother with severe autism establishes a special needs trust that will ensure he still has access to resources beyond what public benefits could provide if she passes away before him.

 

Spendthrift Trust

Whether revocable or irrevocable, a spendthrift trust releases assets over time on a schedule you set, which can provide income to your beneficiaries while protecting your assets from irresponsible spending.

Use case examples:

  • A married couple creates a spendthrift trust for their son, who has had financial trouble over the years due to poor decisions and reckless spending. The trust provides a structured income while safeguarding the assets from creditors.
  • A father creates a spendthrift trust for a daughter who has previously struggled with substance abuse, including conditions that the assets must be released only for education, healthcare, or housing expenses – protecting the assets and providing for her welfare.

 

Funeral Trust

Creating a funeral trust lets you prearrange funeral plans and prepay for expenses, and it can be revocable or irrevocable. It allows any specified person or entity to handle funeral arrangements, reduces funeral expenses and planning challenges for loved ones, and – if irrevocable – will be excluding when counting assets to determine your Medicaid availability.

Use case examples:

  • An older woman is moving into an assisted living facility. She doesn’t want to risk running out of money and leaving her family with funeral expenses, so she puts assets into a funeral trust.
  • An elderly couple wants to ensure their funerals are carried out based on their wishes, so they put money into a funeral trust, giving them peace of mind and taking the burden off their loved ones.

 

Charitable Trust

You can leave your assets to a tax-exempt nonprofit or charitable organization close to your heart with either a charitable lead trust or a charitable remainder trust. Both types allow you to provide tax-efficient support for a charity or nonprofit you value while creating potential income for yourself and your heirs.

Use case examples: 

  • A married couple whose child received lifesaving treatment at a nonprofit hospital creates a charitable remainder trust, securing lifetime income and future support for the hospital’s continued service to other families.
  • A longtime Habitat for Humanity volunteer and donor establishes a charitable lead trust, ensuring annual donations to the nonprofit housing organization with a remainder interest to their children, promoting continued philanthropy while planning for the family legacy.

 

Dynasty Trust

Designed to preserve generational wealth and protect assets from gift and estate taxes, creditors, and divorce claims, dynasty or perpetual trusts are irrevocable trusts for which the grantor sets the rules. After you have funded the trust, no one can change its terms, and most grantors appoint a bank or other financial institution as the trustee. New generations can assume the beneficiary role throughout its duration.

Use case examples:

  • A wealthy older couple puts most of their business assets, real estate holdings, and investment portfolio into a dynasty trust, bypassing certain taxes and ensuring their family will receive financial support for future generations.
  • A successful businessperson/philanthropist establishes a dynasty trust that will benefit current and future generations of his family. The trust will help pay for higher education and will match the donations family members make to several charitable causes, thereby carrying on his legacy of prioritizing education and generosity.

 

Explore Your Options

Trusts can be valuable tools in estate planning, and a trusted financial professional with estate planning experience can advise you on which type of trust would fit your estate planning needs and goals and explain how each type of trust is handled in your state.

View the Trust Services offered through Minster Bank Private Wealth Management, and Contact Us to meet with an advisor to get started today!

 

Securities and Investment Products offered through the Minster Bank Private Wealth Management Group: Not FDIC insured. May lose value. Not financial institution guaranteed. Not a deposit. Not insured by any federal government agency.

Categories


Disclosures

Securities and Investment Products offered through the Minster Bank Private Wealth Management Group: Not FDIC insured. May lose value. Not financial institution guaranteed. Not a deposit. Not insured by any federal government agency.

Close Form

Online Banking Login

Questions? How can we help?