
A Will is not Enough – “Trusts” Explained in Plain English
Offshore Tax with HTJ.tax · htjtax
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Show Notes
Many people assume trusts are only for the ultra-wealthy. In reality, trusts are about planning, clarity, and protection, not just large fortunes. In this episode, we explain what a trust actually does and why many families use one alongside a Will.
⚖️ What Is a Trust?
A revocable living trust is essentially a legal structure that holds assets for your benefit during your lifetime and then distributes them according to your instructions after death.
Think of it as a legal “bucket”:
• You place assets into the bucket
• You stay fully in control while alive
• If you become incapacitated or die, someone you selected takes over and follows your written instructions
This allows your plan to operate without court intervention.
📜 Why a Will Alone May Not Be Enough
A Will is important—but it typically only becomes effective after death.
In many jurisdictions, assets held in your individual name must go through probate, which can be:
• Slow
• Public
• Costly
• Court-supervised
By contrast, assets properly titled in a trust usually bypass probate entirely.
👨👩👧 More Control for Your Family
A trust allows you to design practical instructions for real-life situations.
Instead of leaving a child a large inheritance at 18, you can set rules such as:
• Age-based distributions
• Education funding provisions
• Health and support payments
• Creditor protection safeguards
This structure allows families to balance support with responsible stewardship.
🛡️ Protection During Incapacity
One of the most valuable features of a living trust is incapacity planning.
If illness or injury prevents you from managing finances:
• Your successor trustee can step in immediately
• No court guardianship process is required
• Bills, investments, and property can continue to be managed smoothly
This helps avoid legal uncertainty during already stressful situations.
⚠️ The Most Common Mistake: Not Funding the Trust
Creating a trust is only the first step.
For it to work properly, assets must be formally transferred or titled into the trust, such as:
• Real estate
• Bank and investment accounts
• Business interests
An unfunded trust—sometimes called an “empty trust”—will not avoid probate.
🎯 Key Takeaway
A living trust isn’t about wealth. It’s about:
• Privacy
• Avoiding probate
• Protecting your family during incapacity
• Creating clear instructions for the future
Good planning ensures your loved ones inherit a plan, not a problem.