Unless you expect to owe federal estate tax at
your death or your spouse's, a basic living trust to avoid probate
may be all the trust you need. (Only about 2% of estates -- the
largest ones -- owe estate tax.) It allows property to avoid
probate and to quickly and efficiently pass to the beneficiaries
you name, without the hassles and expense of probate court
proceedings.
A married couple can use one basic living
trust to handle both co-owned property and the separate property
of either spouse.
To create a basic living trust, you make a
document called a Declaration of Trust, which is similar to a
will. You name yourself as trustee -- the person in charge of the
trust property. Then you transfer ownership of some or all of your
property to yourself in your capacity as trustee. For example, you
might sign a deed transferring your house from yourself to
yourself "as trustee of the Jane Smith Revocable Living Trust
dated July 12, 2002."
Because you're the trustee, you don't give
up any control over the property you put in trust. If you and your
spouse create a trust together, you will be co-trustees.
In the Declaration of Trust document, you
name the people or organizations you want to inherit trust
property after your death. You can change those choices if you
wish; you can also revoke the trust at any time.
When you die, the person you named in the
trust document to take over -- called the successor trustee --
transfers ownership of trust property to the people you want to
get it. In most cases, the successor trustee can handle the whole
thing in a few weeks with some simple paperwork. No probate court
proceedings are required.
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