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Irrevocable Trusts
The facts ...
A trust is a contract between the Grantor (the person who creates the trust), the Trustee (one who controls the trust) and the beneficiaries
(those entitled to benefit from the trust). You, as Grantor, determine how the trust will be operated by
the Trustee and who benefits from it, how and when.
While a Revocable Trust permits you to maintain full control (as Trustee) and have access to all
your assets (as beneficiary), an Irrevocable Trust, once created, may prohibit your right to control the
trust (as Trustee) or have access to your assets, but you get to decide to what extent.
It is a common misconception that irrevocable trusts, once created, cannot be changed. While that is true of many irrevocable trusts
created to avoid taxes (tax reduction or avoidance trusts), it is not true of all irrevocable trusts. An irrevocable trust is a trust you create for the benefit
of yourself or others and once created, you, as Grantor, must give up your right to "something."
Debtor/Creditor law provides that whatever you can get, your creditors can get. You can have known creditors (i.e., bank/credit card debt) or unknown creditors (unforeseen
lawsuits, nursing home, divorce). A typical "income only" irrevocable trust permits you to receive the income on your assets, but you must give up your right to principal. In some
irrevocable trusts, you can retain the right to change who gets your assets during your life and after
your death, and maintain 100% control of your assets until your mental disability or death (asset protection
trusts).
Tax reduction/avoidance trusts are much more restrictive than asset protection trusts. Typically, you cannot
retain any right to control or access any of the assets in an irrevocable tax reduction/avoidance trust. There are many irrevocable
trusts available that are quite flexible and grantor-friendly. You should consult a qualified estate planning
attorney to get counseled on all your options before creating an irrevocable trust.
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