In my estate planning practice, I advise my clients about the different documents that make up an estate plan, including Wills and Trusts. Both Wills and Trusts are used to pass assets on to beneficiaries at death. However, there are distinct advantages to using a Trust over a Will. Here are five ways in which a Trust beats a Will.
1. A Trust can be used to Avoid Probate – a Will cannot. Probate is the process of changing the title on assets when someone passes away. Assets that are owned in a deceased person’s individual name and for which there is no named beneficiary are no longer accessible once the owner of the asset has died. In order for family members to gain access to accounts or other assets in the deceased’s individual name, they must file a petition with the probate court and wait for the court to approve the Will and appoint the Personal Representative. This can be a long and costly process during which bills cannot be paid and assets cannot be managed. A Trust is an excellent probate avoidance tool because assets that are owned in the name of a Trust are immediately accessible to the trust-maker’s designated successor.
2. A Trust can provide Creditor Protection for the Inheritance you Leave to Beneficiaries – a Will cannot. Many people worry that the inheritance they leave to their children will be lost to their children’s creditors such as a divorcing spouse, unpaid credit card bills, a bankruptcy, a business loss, or a lawsuit. Sadly, this is often the case when assets are distributed to beneficiaries via a Will. A Trust allows the maker to safeguard an inheritance from the easy reach of the beneficiaries’ creditors by keeping the assets out of the name of the beneficiary. Ownership of the assets remains in the Trust. The beneficiary will have access to the assets in accordance with the directions you leave in your Trust. You may name your beneficiary to serve as Trustee, allowing the beneficiary to manage her own inheritance. By leaving assets to your beneficiaries via a Trust rather than outright via your Will, you can ensure that the assets you worked so hard for will be available to your children and future generations and will not end up with the beneficiary’s ex-spouse.
3. A Trust can Protect Government Benefits for a Person with Disabilities – a Will cannot. If you have a child, grandchild or other beneficiary with disabilities, then a Trust is a must. If you leave assets to a person who receives needs-based government benefits via your Will, it will place your beneficiary in the difficult position of either losing those benefits, or transferring the inheritance into a Trust of which the state must be the beneficiary at the beneficiary’s death. Unless the inheritance you are leaving is so significant that the monetary and medical benefits available to the person through programs such as Social Security and Medicaid are no longer important, then making sure that those government benefits continue to be available is vital. Leaving assets to a person with disabilities via a Trust is the best way to ensure those government benefits are preserved and that the inheritance you leave will be available to pay for expenses that are not covered by those benefits, which while vital to many, are limited in their scope.
4. A Trust makes it Easier to Manage Assets for an Incapacitated Person – a Will cannot. If a person experiences a period of incapacity during their lifetimes, they will need someone to pay their bills, manage their investments, maybe sell their house, etc. The worst situation to be in should this occur is to have done no estate planning at all. For those with no estate planning in place, family members or another interested party will need to petition the court to be appointed as the Conservator for the incapacitated person in order to obtain authority to manage the assets. This is an expensive, time-consuming, and public process. A basic estate plan will include a durable Power of Attorney which is used to appoint a person to manage one’s affairs in the event of incapacity. A Power of Attorney is a very important estate planning document but it can be difficult for the appointed individual to utilize with banks and other financial institutions which often push back hard on someone attempting to access an account using a Power of Attorney. Banks and other financial institutions do not have the same hostility toward Trust accounts. The successor Trustee of a Trust can easily manage the Trust assets and use them for the benefit of the trust-maker in the event of the trust-maker’s incapacity
5. A Trust can Administer Assets for Minor Beneficiaries without Court Intervention – a Will cannot. Leaving money directly to a minor (under age 18) creates an administrative nightmare because under the law, a minor does not have the legal capacity to receive assets. The parent of the minor does not have the authority to act as the child’s legal representative until the court says so. As such, if you die with a Will that leaves money to minor beneficiaries, or if you name a minor as the beneficiary of your life insurance or IRA, the court will need to appoint a Conservator to receive that inheritance for the minor. The Conservator will be required to report annually to the court and the court will appoint an overseer (guardian ad litem) to make sure the Conservator is doing his or her job for your minor beneficiaries. This means huge costs and long delays in administering funds for minors. It also means that when the minor turns 18, he or she will be entitled to receive all of those assets and will be free to do with them as he or she wishes (think, fast cars, spring break, and lots of shopping). Creating a Trust to receive assets passing to a minor, or even to a young adult beneficiary, is the best way to ensure that the court is not involved in the process, that the person you want to manage assets for the beneficiary is able to do so, and that the beneficiary may use the assets only for purposes you decide are important and/or at ages that you dictate.
These are just five of the many ways in which a Trust is superior to a Will. If you want to learn more about whether a Trust is right for you, call us or email us to schedule an appointment with one of our experienced estate planning attorneys.
Attorney Suzanne R. Sayward is a partner with the Dedham law firm of Samuel, Sayward & Baler LLC which focuses on advising its clients in the areas of estate planning, estate and Trust settlement and elder law matters. She is certified as an Elder Law Attorney by the National Elder Law Foundation, a private organization whose standards for certification are not regulated by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. This article is not intended to provide legal advice or create or imply an attorney-client relationship. No information contained herein is a substitute for a personal consultation with an attorney. For more information visit our website at www.ssbllc.com or call 781/461-1020.
September, 2024
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