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Facts versus Fiction
Increasingly, people are being solicited to draw living trusts.
Often, people are led to believe that a living
trust is the only way to accomplish things or terrible things
will happen unless a person has a living trust. Much of what is being said simply is not true.
• With or without a living trust, you need a will. Even if a living trust makes sense, it governs only those assets
actually delivered to it. Everything else passes under
a person’s will. Without a will,
State law, not your intentions, will govern.
• A living trust usually costs more than any probate fees might be. Today,
probate fees in Erie County for an estate of $1 million are $1,000. That’s
a lot less than what you’ll pay for a living trust agreement.
• A living trust will not save any federal estate tax or Pennsylvania
inheritance tax. Whether your assets pass under a will or under a living trust,
these taxes, if due, must be paid.
• With or without a living trust, bills get paid before heirs receive
distribution and legal requirements cannot be avoided. While
some claim that a living trust will assure that your heirs receive
money more quickly upon your death, the fact is that
assets have to be collected and often sold; debts and taxes must
be paid and no living trust can change that. Unfortunately, it is
those you want to help who end up
learning that this is true. And unlike an estate administration,
the trustee under a living trust does not receive legal protection from potential claims when assets
are distributed.
• A living trust does not necessarily save legal costs upon your death. Because
much of the same work has to be done after the death of a person who leaves a living
trust as is done in an estate administration, the costs are about
the same.
• A living trust can make things more complicated during your life. Because
a living trust makes sense only if assets are delivered to it, this can involve
formal transfer of title in real estate, vehicles, bank and investment
accounts and other assets. If the intent is that
everything pass under a living trust, this has to continue as
new assets are acquired. Self-help packets and the
mass of paper and forms that solicitors of living trusts hand
out seldom are understood, and people often forget to take important actions
as a result.
Focus on Your Objectives
This is not to say that a living trust never is a good idea.
If you own real estate located in another state,
delivering title to that real estate to a living trust may avoid
difficulties with probate laws there. Some people
having particularly large or complex estates can benefit from
a living trust. As with everything else, defining
and accomplishing your objectives is most important. If you consult
with a lawyer, he or she can help with suggestions as to how
to do that.
If you need an attorney and don't have one, the Lawyer Referral and Information Service can help.
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