Volume 10, Issue 3
The Wealth Counselor
How Clients Can Easily Integrate Asset Protection Trusts into Their Estate Plans
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Protecting assets against loss has become a common goal of estate planning. Asset protection trusts come in many different forms and can be used to protect property for the use and benefit of clients as well as their families and other beneficiaries. In this issue you will learn how clients can easily integrate asset protection trusts into their estate plans.
What Is an Asset Protection Trust? An asset protection trust is a special type of irrevocable trust in which the trust funds are held and invested by the Trustee and are only distributed on a discretionary basis. The purpose of an asset protection trust is to keep the trust assets secure for the beneficiaries instead of being exposed to loss to the beneficiary’s creditors, in a divorce, or to predators. Asset protection trusts come in two forms: third party trusts and self-settled trusts. A third party trust is set up by one party for the benefit of another, while a self-settled trust is set up by one party for their own benefit. Third Party Asset Protection Trusts Provide Inheritance Protection Leaving an inheritance outright to a child or grandchild without any strings attached is risky in this day and age of high divorce rates, lawsuits, and bankruptcies. There is also the very real risk that an outright inheritance will be frittered away or end up in the hands of a spouse instead of in the hands of children or grandchildren. Finally, a beneficiary may be born with a disability or develop one later in life that will end up rapidly depleting their inheritance by disqualifying the beneficiary from receiving government help in paying medical and other bills. There are a number of different types of third party asset protection trusts that clients can establish to insure their hard earned money is used only for the benefit of their family:
The client can also make trust distribution standards as limited or as broad as the client chooses. For example, the client can state that the funds can only be used to pay medical bills or for education, or the Trustee can be given broad discretion to make distributions in the best interest of the beneficiary. The client may also want to require the Trustee to take into consideration the beneficiary’s income and other assets before making distributions. Alternatively, the Trustee can be given the authority to deplete the trust in favor of the income beneficiary to the detriment of the remainder beneficiaries. If there are multiple beneficiaries, such as a trust for the benefit of a surviving spouse and children, the Trustee can be directed to give preferential treatment to one or more beneficiaries over the others. Self-Settled Asset Protection Trusts Are the New Frontier Until the late 1990s, self-settled asset protection trusts were not recognized in the United States. Prior to this a self-settled asset protection trust was required to be established outside the United States, often in an exotic place such as the Cook Islands or the Cayman Islands. Then in 1997 Alaska became the first state to recognize self-settled asset protection trusts, followed closely by Delaware. Since then, a handful of other states have enacted self-settled asset protection legislation in some form, bringing the current total to fifteen:
Planning Tip: Clients needs to be aware that there are only a limited number of U.S. cases interpreting domestic asset protection statutes. Self-settled domestic asset protection trust planning is still developing. Nonetheless, when layered with other types of asset protection planning, including liability insurance, third party asset protection trusts, and limited liability entities, domestic self-settled asset protection trusts offer another tool in the planner’s toolbox designed to put up roadblocks between the client’s assets and the client’s creditors. The Bottom Line on Asset Protection Trusts Asset protection trusts offer many planning opportunities for clients of even modest means. We are available to answer your questions about asset protection trusts and help you identify clients who will benefit from this type of planning. |
Law Offices of Kimberly Lessing, APLC • 4740 Green River Road, Suite 117-H • Corona, CA 92880 • (951) 279-6626
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