Close
Updated:

What is a Family Trust?

What is a Family Trust?

By Phil Rarick, Weston Trust Attorney

Every family needs instructions in the event of disability or death.  A Family Trust, also known as a Living Trust, is your detailed, legally binding instructions to care for you and your family in the event of mental incapacity or death. A trust can accomplish all the goals of a will and in addition avoid probate and guardianship when properly funded.  A will must go through a bureaucratic, expensive and time-consuming legal process called probate where the court may intervene in your personal or business affairs.   This is why the Revocable Family Trust has become the preferred plan of choice over a will for most people; it is almost certainly the best plan if you have children.

 

Understanding a Family Trust – a/k/a Living Trust

There are three primary roles in a Family Trust:  the grantor, trustee, and beneficiary.

The grantor is the person who makes the trust; the Trustee is the person who is legally found to follow the trust instructions exactly as stated in the Trust.  And the beneficiary? Every dime of the trust must go to the beneficiaries.  Initially, you can be the Grantor, Trustee, and, along with your spouse or children, the Beneficiaries.

Most Family Trusts are revocable because the grantor wants to retain 100% control over the trust instructions and change them whenever he or she wants at any time during their lifetime.   Control and flexibility are two key goals in Trusts.  The Trust has a major advantage over the mortal person: it does not become incapacitated, and it does not end at death.  It continues to provide for your family as long as needed to help protect the lifestyle of your family.   If you have children, it can help ensure they get a high-quality education and that the funds cannot be claimed by a spouse or creditor of the child.

 

Key Benefits of a Revocable Family Trust

  1. Avoiding Guardianship. Guardianship is a bureaucratic legal process where the court supervises the person and/or property of a person.  The court selects the Guardian.    In my 30 years of practice as a Miami Trust attorney, I cannot recall anyone who wanted to allow a court to intervene in their personal or business affairs; almost all persons want a family member to take charge if they have a temporary or permanent incapacity.  A trust can help you keep legal control in the family.

 

  1. Avoiding Probate. One of the biggest advantages of a family trust is that it allows assets to bypass the probate process provided the Trust is properly funded. Probate is the court-supervised process of distributing a deceased person’s estate, which can be time-consuming, costly, and public. By transferring assets to a family trust, those assets can be distributed directly to the beneficiaries without the need for probate, saving time and money.

 

  1. Protection for Minor Children and Young Adults. The Trust can help ensure that funds going to minor or adult children are used in a smart way.    For minor children, a trust can help ensure that the minor child does not waste the funds by getting a big lump sum payment or that the funds could be claimed by creditors of the child after age 18.  Rather, the trust can help ensure the child receives a first-rate college and graduate education. For adult children who may marry or are already married, the trust can provide protections so the adult child’s spouse cannot claim funds designated for the child.

 

Conclusion

Whether you have $100,000 or over $1 million you should first consider a Family Trust or a Living Trust over a Will for your estate plan as a Trust that is properly funded will help avoid the bureaucratic legal processes known as guardianship and probate.  Plus, the trust can provide strong protections for minor and adult children to make sure your hard-earned money is used in a smart way for your children’s future.

For more information about the Family Trust or Living Trust see our short guide, Understanding Living Trusts by Miami Trust attorney Phil Rarick or contact our office at (305) 556-5209 for a consultation.

Contact Us