Estate Planning

What is a Revocable or Living Trust?

  First, a trust is a contract that names a trustee to manage any assets owned by the trust. A grantor (aka settlor) gives something to another person with contractual instructions as to what they can…

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  1. What are the advantages of a revocable trust?
  2. What are the disadvantages of a revocable trust?
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First, a trust is a contract that names a trustee to manage any assets owned by the trust. A grantor (aka settlor) gives something to another person with contractual instructions as to what they can and cannot do with the property. Put simply, the grantor is giving an item to another person to hold for them until certain events occur. The trustee does not own the assets, the trust does.
Revocable trusts can be changed by the grantor or “revoked” at any time. For this reason, the courts view the property within a revocable trust as still being owned by the grantor. The grantor continues to pay taxes on any income and can control the property as if it were their own.
 

What are the advantages of a revocable trust?

 

Two main advantages of a revocable trust are the avoidance of probate and the possibility of “controlling one’s assets from the grave.” A revocable trust can hold every type of asset. If one places all of their assets in a revocable trust, there is nothing left for the probate court to do and thus there would be no need for probate court. Essentially, all of the assets have already been gifted (to the trust).
 
The trust becomes irrevocable at death because the grantor is no longer alive to make changes or revoke the trust. The trustee must then follow the instructions outlined within the trust document. The document could just describe how to distribute all of the assets, such as in a will, and then dissolve, or it may contain provisions for the trustee to continue to manage the assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries. These provisions may be good for protecting assets for the heirs from the issues described above. For example, the young adult beneficiary may not have access to the full assets of the trust, but rather the trustee could give out assets at certain ages, for certain events or have instructions to cut out the beneficiaries payments if they do not graduate college or run up significant debt or become chemically dependent.
 

What are the disadvantages of a revocable trust?

 

Like a will, a revocable trust offers no protection from estate or death taxes. Because the assets are still considered property of the grantor, they are, before the time of death, considered an uncompleted gift. When the assets are then gifted to the trust at death, they are subject to the same estate tax as a will.
 
A revocable trust, however, offers no financial protection during the grantor’s lifetime. For example, if a grantor is successfully sued, the plaintiff may still take assets from the revocable trust to satisfy their claims. Medicaid also considers assets in a revocable trust as countable assets. In other words, a person entering a nursing home must “spend down” nearly all of the assets in a revocable trust to qualify for Medicaid to help pay for their nursing home care. All of these issues stem from the basic premise that if a person has access and/or direct control of assets (such as a revocable trust – they can be forced to revoke it and use the assets) then these assets are accessible to any creditors such as a nursing home or a winning plaintiff.
 
Protect your assets for yourself and your children and beneficiaries and avoid tax dollars. Assets can be protected from frivolous lawsuits while eliminating your estate taxes and probate, and also ensuring superior Medicaid asset protection for both parents and children with our Premium UltraTrust Irrevocable Trust. Call today at (888) 938-5872 for a no-cost, no obligatioin consultation and to learn more.
 
Rocco Beatrice, CPA, MST, MBA, CWPP, CAPP, MMB – Managing Director, Estate Street Partners, LLC. Mr. Beatrice is an “AA” asset protection, Trust, and estate planning expert.

Helpful resources: Helpful next steps often include Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust, Case Studies, and official CFPB guidance for heirs before making final trust-planning decisions.

Where the next decision becomes clearer

Once What is a Revocable or Living Trust? is on the table, the next questions usually center on risk, flexibility, and which planning step deserves attention first.

Points readers weigh before moving forward

  • Timing matters because planning choices usually become narrower once a problem is already close.
  • Control matters because the answer often depends on how much access or authority the owner wants to keep.
  • Funding matters because a trust or entity has to be set up and maintained correctly to matter.

Practical reading path

To keep the next step practical rather than abstract, readers often move to Asset Protection Trust, Irrevocable Trust, and How It Works. When the question turns from reading to implementation, many readers move from these guides to a direct planning conversation.

Related resources

After reading What is a Revocable or Living Trust?, most readers want a clearer next step: which structure answers the same problem, what timing changes the result, and where the practical follow-up questions usually lead.

What people compare next

The next question is usually not abstract. It is whether a trust, an entity, or a different planning step does the real job better in your situation.

What often changes the answer

Timing, ownership, funding, and how much control you want to keep usually matter more than labels alone.

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 Trust

See how trust-based planning is used to protect wealth, organize control, and support long-term decisions.

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.

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

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Reach out when you want to talk through timing, structure, and the next steps that best fit your situation.

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

Clear answers make it easier to compare structure, timing, control, and the next step that fits best.

What usually matters most before moving ahead with a trust-based protection plan?

Most people get the clearest answer by looking at timing, current ownership, funding, and how much control they want to keep. Those points usually shape the next step more than labels alone.

How do readers usually decide which related page to read next?

Most readers move next to the page that answers the practical question left open after the article, whether that is lawsuit exposure, business-owner risk, trust structure, cost, or how the process works.

When does it help to compare more than one structure instead of stopping with one article?

It usually helps as soon as the decision involves more than one concern at the same time, such as protection, control, taxes, family planning, or business exposure. That is when side-by-side comparison becomes more useful than reading in isolation.

What makes the next step feel more practical and less theoretical?

The next step feels more practical once the discussion turns to actual assets, ownership, timing, and the sequence of decisions that would need to happen in real life.

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