goodhandy.com goodhandy.com
Search:    Main Page :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Service :> Place Your Link :> Add Your Article   
 

Own A Slice of Paradise in Mexico Quintana Roo

Is your heart set on a getaway home in Mexico Quintana Roo? - Doug Fowler
 

Tax Traps for New Real Estate Investors

Thinking about investing in real estate? Don't get caught in any of these tax traps! These mistakes ... - Stephen Nelson
 

Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Foreclosures

When you get a loan from a bank, you are usually required to put up an assurance of payment. This is ... - Kent Pinkerton
 
 

Putting your Estate in Order

Put Your Estate in Order For business owners, an effective estate plan addresses a number of concern ... - Richard R L Evans
 

Real Estate Market Timing

After Pinocchio and Cinderella, Real Estate Market Timing is my third preferred fairy tale. I like i ... - Luigi Frascati
 

Four Real Estate Investment Tips, that you can learn from Warren Buffet, and other Stock Investors

Some of the most successful stock investors ever have based their investing principals on value inve ... - Tony John
 

SA Property Investment: How To Get Going!

When you try borrowing money from your local bank to purchase shares in that bank you will most cert ... - Neels Theron
 

Real Estate Partners - A Good Idea?

Having real estate partners may seem like a great idea, and maybe it is, but let me tell you my stor ... - Steven Gillman
 
 

Main Page › Property & Estate › Real Estate Planning
 

The Living Trust

 
Author: Ronald Hudkins
 

A living trust has many advantages over a simple will or testamentary trust (trust after death). The first advantage is that it keeps the IRS even further out of the process than does either a will or trust that becomes effective after death. The second is that, unlike a testamentary trust, a living trust is not continually supervised by the court. And finally, a living trust is far less likely to be challenged, because creating a trust while you are alive makes contests over what you intended easy to resolve (you are still there to make your wishes known). It is less likely that a relative will come forward and say that they think you are insane or incompetent, while you are still around to challenge the assertion. As instruments go, the living trust has a great deal to offer.

The only downside of the living trust may be that your would-be-heirs (provided you had a will) know what you are giving them. Those who are being extra nice just in case they might get something, and for that reason alone, may stop visiting as often, although that may be a blessing in disguise. That is the great thing about a will -- people only know what you think of them after youre beyond hearing complaints and insults. However, trusts are by most accounts still vastly superior.

Elements of a trust:

A trust is easy to form and it is a trusts minimal requirement that makes it such a flexible instrument for asset transfer.
A trust is created when the settlor (a term denoting the creator of the trust) places property into the care of another person or group (called the trustee) for the benefit of a third party beneficiary.
The property used to create the trust is traditionally used to generate income for the beneficiary.
One rule is that the settlor (the creator of the trust) cannot be the sole beneficiary of the trust. This means that you cant create a trust by placing assets into the care of another person or group solely for your own benefit, but it is okay if you benefit too.

So, unlike a will, you can use a trust to create income for yourself before you die and build your would-be-heirs into the trust as well. The only real problem this creates is that the other beneficiaries (your heirs) may have rights to the trust before you have passed. However, the instrument is flexible enough to allow for a great deal of control over this aspect of the trust, such that if you wish to create a trust whose other beneficiaries rights grow greater upon your passing, that is easy to do. This definitely makes a trust something to explore with your lawyer when you do your estate planning.

For example: The creation of a trust begins when you put your assets into the care of a third party, like a bank or an estate planning attorney or a trusted relative or friend. Your attorney may be able to structure the trust so that you get the vast majority of the benefit and allocate a very small portion of the benefits to the other beneficiaries. Your attorney should be able to design the trust so that, upon your passing, your share of the benefits goes to the other beneficiaries in the amounts you see fit.

By bringing your beneficiaries into the trust before your passing you will have greater control over their ability to contest what happens after you are gone. You will also insulate your assets from taxation schemes that affect wills, but do not have any effect on trusts. In most cases the trust is by far the better option for estate planning and you should seriously consider asking your attorney to explain it as an option.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How the Internet is Working Wonders for "For Sale By Owner" Canadians
 
Property for Sale in Bulgaria - Emerging Property Markets 1
 
Understanding How a Buyer's Agent Can Help You
 
Write Before You Cannot Speak!
 
How Can An Estate Plan Help Me?
 
Afraid to Buy a House? Why Renting is Risky Business
 
Commercial Real Estate Loans
 
Home Selling: Making It Easy On Yourself!
 
Who are the Scamsters and Who are the Victims
 
Probate and Probate Avoidance
 
 
 
Free 3 way links
 

Jobs & Careers

Online & Board Games

Policies & Law

Technology & Science

Society & Issues

Fitness & Health

Home & Garden

Issues & News

Malls & Shopping

Sports & Adventure

Academics & Learning

Finance & Banking

Property & Estate

Culture & Art

Cooking & Drinking

Self Management

Teens & Children

Computers & Networking

Business & Commerce

Entertainment

Healthcare & Treatment

Relationship & Lifestyle

Travel & Vacation

Vehicles & Automotive

 
Main Page :> Privacy :> Terms of Service  
© 2008 www.goodhandy.com All Rights Reserved.