Asset Protection

Fraudulent Transfers & Fraudulent Conveyance in Asset Protection

Asset Protection: Questions on Protecting Your Assets     Watch the video on Fraudulent Transfers & Fraudulent Conveyance in Asset Protection   Like this video? Subscribe to our channel.  …

Quick navigation

Jump to the section you need

Use these quick links to go straight to the answer, example, or planning point that matters most right now.

  1. Asset Protection: Questions on Protecting Your Assets
  2. Protecting Assets from Creditors without Defrauding Them
  1. Privacy vs. Secrecy

Asset Protection: Questions on Protecting Your Assets

 

 

Watch the video on Fraudulent Transfers & Fraudulent Conveyance in Asset Protection
 
Like this video? Subscribe to our channel.
 
One of the most important things to keep in mind is that if you wait to protect your assets until a legal claim is filed, it may be too late.
 
Many actions to transfer your assets after a lawsuit has been filed could be considered a fraudulent conveyance. This means that the court could seek repossession of assets from the transferee. If you are in a high risk profession, it is recommended that you retain some of your assets to be available to creditors. This will prevent the courts from obtaining all of your transferred assets.
 
The best way to avoid any of this is to get an asset protection plan in place before you think it will ever be needed. Many state courts have said that there must not be any potential of a claim when you place your assets beyond the reach of the creditors. This is typically a period of one to three years prior to a claim being filed; however, there are ways to get around the rules if implemented correctly by exchanging assets of equal value for a financial instrument. Most attorneys do not understand or know how this could be done. This is what differentiates sophisticated estate planners.
 

Protecting Assets from Creditors without Defrauding Them

 

It is always important to be aware of legal rules against defrauding your creditors. There are laws in place that define fraudulent conveyance. The laws state that the conveyances were made when the transferor of assets was rendered insolvent by incurring an obligation. It also states that conveyances were made without any fair consideration when the original owner of the assets engaged in any business transaction that leaves the transferor with small capital. In addition, it states that the conveyances were made when the transferor believed he may incur debts that he or she will be unable to pay. Lastly, the conveyances were made with the intent to hinder or defraud creditors.
 
Fraudulent conveyance requires that you have the specific intention of defrauding creditors. It is difficult to prove this intent, so the courts have a specific set of guidelines that are used to determine intention. However, if you are solvent when you make the transfer, you are less likely to be guilty of fraudulent transfer. The key is to be aware of whether you are solvent or not.
 

Privacy vs. Secrecy

 

A fraudulent transfer is not always considered to be a felony. However, if there is proof that there has been efforts made to hide the assets, this may constitute a felony under United States laws.
 
In regards to privacy, those individuals who evade taxes and launder money are searching for a way to hide their income and assets from the government. Government employees typically regard privacy as a code word that is used by people who are looking for help in order to implement an illegal transaction. In most cases, when there is an excessive concern for privacy and secrecy, there is usually an act of fraud in the making.
 
Many lawyers who work with asset protection will advocate disclosure to tax agencies. Corporations, limited liability companies and partnerships are entities that are authorized by law. This gives them certain rights without having to obtain consent from the state. If financial affairs of the corporation or partnership are not fully disclosed, the state will not allow any benefits of a separate entity. A trust is a little different and does not require any type of registration with a government agency. This is because a trust is just a contract between a grantor of the trust and the trustee. Irrevocable trusts may offer some protection, but a revocable trust does not provide any asset protection at all. A revocable trust is revocable which allows you to annul the contract; thus, negates the asset protection level of an irrevocable trust.
 
There are a few forms of asset protection that rely on evasion and secrecy instead of making use of the law openly. In this case, the desire for that privacy can turn into a potential felony. If secrecy is essential to the asset protection plan, the chances are it is illegal.
 
Since 9/11 and the Patriot Act, it is almost impossible to hide assets in secrecy and no good asset protection firm will advise this strategy because it does not work. Banks and other financial institutions are required by law to “know their customer” and the penalties are fierce. It is much more effective and some would say outright fun to share your structure with someone threatening to sue you (when you have a solid irrevocable trust in place) and tell the person to “go ahead and sue me because you will never get a dime.” Showing them the structure will deter any smart person – and certainly any smart contingency lawyer – if you are set up correctly. What contingency lawyer would waste his time suing you if s/he had no prospect of collecting money for their time?

Related resources

Readers focused on lawsuit pressure usually want to compare what protection needs to be in place before a claim, what counts as risky timing, and which structures still leave gaps.

What people want to know first

The first concern is usually whether protection still works once risk feels real, or whether timing has already become the deciding factor.

What most readers compare next

Trust structure, entity structure, and transfer timing usually become the next practical questions.

When a conversation helps more

Once structure, timing, and next steps start intersecting, it usually helps to talk through the options in the right order.

Explore Asset Protection From Lawsuit

Review how timing, creditor pressure, and pre-claim planning change the strategy.

Explore Asset Protection

Review the main introduction to asset protection planning and the core decisions that shape a stronger structure.

Explore Irrevocable Trust

Understand how irrevocable trust planning works, when people use it, and what tradeoffs usually matter most.

Explore How It Works

Follow the planning process from consultation through drafting, funding, and the next practical steps.

Explore Ebook

Download the guide for a longer walkthrough you can read at your own pace and revisit later.

Explore Main Blog

Browse more practical articles, comparisons, and next-step guidance across the full UltraTrust blog.

What people usually compare next

Most readers compare structure, timing, control, and the practical next step after narrowing the issue in the article above.

What usually makes the answer more specific

Actual ownership, funding, current exposure, and how much control someone wants to keep usually matter more than labels in isolation.

When another step helps more than another article

Once timing, structure, and next steps start overlapping, it often helps to talk through the sequence instead of trying to compare everything mentally.

Questions readers usually ask next

Lawsuit-focused readers usually want clearer answers around timing, transfer risk, creditor access, and which structure still leaves avoidable gaps.

Can a protection plan still help once a lawsuit feels close?

That usually depends on timing, transfer history, and whether the structure was created before the pressure became obvious. The closer the threat, the more important the facts become.

Why do readers keep comparing trust planning with entity planning in lawsuit situations?

Because they solve different parts of the problem. Entity planning often addresses operating liability, while trust planning is usually part of the conversation about where personal wealth is held.

What often changes the answer in creditor-protection planning?

Transfer timing, funding, retained control, and the facts surrounding the claim usually change the answer more than broad marketing language ever does.

When is the next step to review structure instead of just asking broader questions?

It usually becomes a structure question once the discussion turns to real assets, current ownership, and whether the plan needs to work before a known problem gets closer.

Ready to take the next step?

Get clear guidance on trust structure, planning priorities, and the next move that fits your assets and goals.