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Does Your Trust Need Protection?

You want to pass your wealth on to your children after you’re gone, but you also want the peace of mind that they’ll manage the inheritance with responsibility and care. Learn about the available estate planning tools.

Designing an estate plan can be a delicate balancing act. On the one hand, you want to preserve as much wealth as possible for your family by protecting it from estate taxes and creditors’ claims. On the other hand, you want to have some control over your assets during your life.

 

Unfortunately, these two goals often conflict with each other. Generally, the most effective way to remove wealth from your taxable estate and shield it from creditors is to place it in one or more irrevocable trusts. But, as the name suggests, an irrevocable trust requires you to relinquish control over the trust assets. One potential solution to this problem is to appoint a trust protector.

 

Trust protector’s duties

 

A trust protector is often compared to a member of a corporation’s board of directors. A trustee manages the trust’s day-to-day affairs while the trust protector serves in an oversight capacity to prevent trustee mismanagement and to participate in certain major decisions.

 

A trust protector’s specific powers are set forth in the trust document. Among other things, powers may include adding, changing or eliminating beneficiaries’ interests; replacing a trustee; and amending the trust or redirecting distributions to comply with new laws or to reflect beneficiaries’ changing circumstances.

 

One advantage of using a trust protector is that you can confer powers on the protector that you wouldn’t be able to hold yourself without exposing your assets to creditors or triggering gift or estate taxes.

 

Bear in mind that a trust protector should be distinguished from a trust advisor, who’s available to advise the trustee but has no power to make binding decisions on trust matters.

 

2 primary benefits

 

Trust protectors offer two primary benefits:

 

1. They provide a check against mismanagement, fraud or abuse by the trustee. A trust protector might have the power to remove or replace the trustee, or veto certain decisions, if the trustee isn’t acting in the beneficiaries’ best interests.

 

2. They allow you to build some flexibility into an otherwise rigid estate planning tool. Many people are reluctant to transfer assets to an irrevocable trust for fear that changing tax laws or changing circumstances years or even decades later may affect the trust’s ability to achieve their original goals. At the same time, they may be hesitant to provide the trustee with too much discretionary authority over the trust. A trust protector can step in if circumstances change and modify the trust or take other actions to ensure that the trust continues to accomplish your estate planning objectives.

 

Scope of a trust protector’s powers

 

What powers should you grant your trust protector? The answer depends on the nature of your estate plan, your family’s situation, the capabilities of the trustee and your specific estate planning objectives. But in most cases, it’s advisable to limit the trust protector’s authority to relatively narrow circumstances.

 

© 2022

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