The Trust Protection Myth: Your Revocable Trust Protects Against Lawsuits
WARNING: Many people believe once they set up a Revocable Living Trust and transfer assets into the Trust, those assets are protected from lawsuits. This is absolutely not true.
Posted on August 1, 2014
While Trusts commonly provide asset protection for beneficiaries, few Trusts protect assets owned by the person who created the Trust.
No Immediate Asset Protection? Why Should You Create a Revocable Living Trust?
Fully funded Revocable Trusts are dynamite tools. Here’s why:
1. You can protect assets passing to your spouse and children. Yes, you can provide protections for loved ones that they can’t yet for themselves.
2. Your Trust includes an incapacity plan, avoiding court interference, maintaining your control, and saving your loved ones time, money, and stress.
3. Your Trust allows your assets to avoid probate, minimizing the time, stress, and cost of settling your final affairs.
4. By avoiding the public probate court process, your Trust keeps all details about who is getting what, a private family matter.
What Can You Do to Protect Your Assets?
Comprehensive estate planning has a solid foundation of insurance, including homeowners/renters, umbrella, auto, business, life insurances, disability, and the like. Business entities such as the Limited Liability Company are commonly used for asset protection and Domestic Asset Protection Trusts are sometimes used as well.
Your Revocable Living Trust creates a powerful value and can be drafted to provide asset protection for your loved ones. To protect yourself, use insurance, business entities, and, perhaps, a Domestic Asset Protection Trust.
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