Trust in the USA — Living Trust, Revocable vs Irrevocable, how to establish

Trust in the USA — what it is, asset protection, avoiding probate, state differences (CA vs NY vs FL), Revocable vs Irrevocable, costs.

Introduction

Trust is a legal institution in the USA, where you (Settlor/Grantor) transfer assets to a trust managed by a Trustee for the benefit of beneficiaries. A trust allows you to avoid probate, protect assets from creditors, plan your estate, and reduce estate tax. There is no equivalent in Poland — it must be understood from scratch.

Three parties of a trust

  • Settlor / Grantor / Trustor — the person establishing the trust (YOU)
  • Trustee — the person managing the assets (can be YOU in a living trust, or a fiduciary company)
  • Beneficiary — who receives the benefits (children, spouse, organization)

Why a trust — main benefits

1. Avoids probate

  • Probate is a public court process confirming a will (6-18 months, costs 3-7% of the estate value)
  • With a trust — beneficiaries receive assets immediately after your death
  • No court hearings, no public disclosure of assets
  • Saves time and money for the family

2. Privacy protection

  • A will becomes public after probate — anyone can check it
  • A trust remains private

3. Control after death

  • You can specify distribution conditions: "child receives 1/3 at age 25, 1/3 at age 30, 1/3 at age 35"
  • "Only for education", "Only after marriage"
  • Protection against waste by young heirs

4. Incapacity planning

  • If you lose the ability to make decisions (Alzheimer's, coma) — Successor Trustee takes over management
  • Avoids guardianship court — high costs and trauma

5. Protection from creditors (with irrevocable)

  • Assets in an irrevocable trust = not yours → creditors cannot seize
  • Lawsuits, medical debts, divorce — protected
  • IMPORTANT: does not work retroactively ("fraudulent transfer rule")

6. Estate Tax planning

  • Federal estate tax: $13.99 million exemption (2026); above that — 18-40%
  • A trust can reduce the estate below the threshold
  • Some states have lower thresholds (NY: $5.93 million; OR: $1 million)

Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust

Revocable Living Trust (most popular)

  • You can change, revoke, add/remove assets at any time
  • You remain the "owner" for tax purposes — your SSN, your 1040
  • DOES NOT protect against creditors (because your assets)
  • DOES NOT directly reduce estate tax (but can be structured after death)
  • Main benefit: avoids probate
  • After your death — automatically becomes irrevocable
  • Cost to establish: $1,500-3,500 with a lawyer

Irrevocable Trust

  • You cannot change or revoke (with exceptions)
  • The trust has its own EIN (tax number), its own 1041
  • Protects against creditors (after 4-10 years from establishment, depending on the state)
  • Reduces estate tax (assets removed from your estate)
  • Used for:
    • ILIT (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust) — life insurance proceeds outside the estate
    • Medicaid Asset Protection Trust — qualification for Medicaid complete after 5 years
    • Special Needs Trust — for a child with disabilities, without losing SSI/Medicaid benefits
  • Cost: $3,500-10,000 with a lawyer

State differences — key

California

  • Probate costs 4-7% of the value (statutory fees) — a trust saves a fortune
  • Living trusts are very popular
  • "Heggstad petition" allows adding forgotten assets

New York

  • Probate is more flexible than in CA
  • Estate tax threshold $5.93 million — significant for the wealthy
  • "Surrogate's Court" handles probate

Florida

  • Probate is relatively quick
  • No state estate tax
  • Homestead protection (home protected from creditors)
  • "Lady Bird Deed" — an alternative to a trust for real estate

Illinois

  • Estate tax threshold $4 million (low!)
  • Trusts are popular for reducing IL estate tax
  • "Small estate affidavit" up to $100k without probate

New Jersey

  • Inheritance tax (depends on the beneficiary's relationship) — siblings, aunts/uncles pay
  • Trust can bypass for more distant relatives

What to put in a trust

  • Real estate — deed to the trust
  • Bank accounts — retitling to the trust ("John Smith Living Trust")
  • Stocks, bonds, brokerage — retitling
  • Vehicles (in some states) — title to the trust
  • Business (LLC, corporation) — shares transferred
  • DO NOT include: 401(k), IRA, life insurance (have separate beneficiaries — just beneficiary designation is sufficient)

Procedure to establish a Living Trust

  1. Choose a lawyer specializing in estate planning (avoid mass-market online forms)
  2. Consultation meeting 1-2 hours, discussing your situation (assets, family, goals)
  3. Lawyer prepares documents:
    • Trust Agreement (main document)
    • Pour-Over Will (supplemental will — catches assets not placed in the trust)
    • Power of Attorney (financial power of attorney)
    • Health Care Proxy + Living Will (health-related)
  4. Sign in front of a notary with 2 witnesses
  5. FUNDING THE TRUST — transferring assets (CRITICAL!)
    • Lawyer or you transfer real estate deeds
    • Bank changes title of accounts
    • Broker changes title of investment accounts
  6. Update every 5-10 years or with life changes (divorce, death, births)

Trust for Poles with Polish assets

  • An American trust DOES NOT work for real estate in Poland (Polish law does not recognize trusts)
  • For assets in Poland: Polish notarial will + possibly a power of attorney
  • Hybrid: trust in the USA for US assets + Polish wills for Poland
  • See inheritance PL-USA

Trust tax traps

  • Irrevocable trust: trust filer 1041 — higher tax rates than personal (37% at $14k income)
  • Distributions to beneficiaries: K-1 from trust → beneficiary pays tax at their rate
  • Trust "Grantor" (most revocable) — you pay tax (your SSN, 1040)
  • Foreign trust (if established abroad) — very complicated IRS reporting

Self-DIY trust (online)

  • LegalZoom, Trust & Will, Quicken WillMaker — $150-500
  • NOT recommended for complicated cases (second spouse, children from different relationships, Polish assets, business)
  • Common DIY mistakes: incorrect beneficiary names, unfunded trust, outdated documents
  • OK for simple cases: marriage + children, assets < $500k

Most common mistakes

  • Establishing a trust and not funding it — useless; "unfunded trust"
  • Missing Pour-Over Will — assets not in the trust go to probate
  • Not updating after divorce — ex-spouse remains a beneficiary
  • Missing Successor Trustee — chaos after your death/incapacity
  • DIY trust for complicated estate — costly mistakes
  • Establishing an irrevocable trust without consulting a lawyer — cannot be revoked!
  • Skipping a trust for safety "because the spouse inherits" — incapacity, second marriages, children together vs not together
  • Not informing Successor Trustee where documents are located

Official sources

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