When Robin Williams and Joan Rivers died in 2014, they had already taken steps to look after their families by setting up trusts. That didn't happen by accident – it required careful planning, diligence, and close work with their estate lawyers and financial advisors.
Is it time to talk to your clients about setting up a trust? Use this article as a framework for that conversation. We'll go over what a trust is, what the different types are, and how to make it part of a solid estate plan.
A trust is a fiduciary relationship where one party – the grantor – gives a second party, the trustee, the right to hold title to property or assets. The trustee holds these assets on behalf of a third party called the beneficiary.
These three parties are named in a trust, and each has a specific role:
While trusts are considered an investment vehicle, they are primarily a legal entity that names these three parties and their responsibilities.
A trust contains two main components:
Trusts serve important estate planning goals, such as reducing taxes. But here's the key benefit: trusts typically avoid probate, which saves time and money. And for your high-profile clients, avoiding probate means records are kept private.
We'll go over other benefits of trusts in a later section.
These are the two broad categories of trusts. Most clients start with revocable trusts, and some eventually use irrevocable trusts for specific tax goals.
Revocable trusts, also called living trusts revocable living trusts, are created during the grantor's lifetime. The grantor can:
The grantor has full control of the trust. This means having free access to the assets in the trust. This flexibility is the main appeal. They can adjust the plan as circumstances change.
With that flexibility comes one restriction: a revocable trust is subject to estate taxes. Since the grantor controls and benefits from the assets, the IRS includes them in the taxable estate. In effect, a revocable trust is primarily a probate avoidance tool.
An irrevocable trust works differently; once it has been set up, it cannot be changed at all. This restriction comes with these benefits:
A client who sets up an irrevocable trust loses control forever. They cannot access the money for personal needs later. This permanence calls for careful planning. Read our guide on irrevocable trusts for more.
There are other options to discuss with clients, depending on what type of trust suits their needs best. Here are a few of them:
These are just a few of the strategies you can take when discussing estate planning with your clients.
In 2024, a survey on estate planning found that respondents knew the basic differences between trusts and wills but missed out on the small but important details. This presents an opportunity for advisors like you to educate clients on trusts and wills.
A will is a legal document that directs who receives assets after death. Think of it as your client's instruction letter to the court – a will:
Here's a downside: a will goes through probate court. It is reviewed by a judge but can be contested by others, such as family members excluded from the will. The entire process becomes public record. Anyone can access the will and see what was owned and who inherited what.
Probate involves costs. Court fees and attorney fees reduce what beneficiaries stand to receive. The process takes time. In many states, it can take months or even years.
A trust, meanwhile, is a legal contract. It can operate during the grantor's lifetime. Assets held in a trust bypass probate entirely, so beneficiaries access assets much faster. The process remains completely private. Court involvement is minimal or nonexistent.
Trusts offer control that wills cannot match. The grantor can specify exactly when distributions take place. They can specify to whom distributions go. They can leave everything to a spouse or split assets between spouse and children. They can stagger distributions based on age.
Here's one big difference: Wills only work after death. Unlike irrevocable trusts, wills and revocable living trusts can be updated. They should be reviewed and revised after major life events:
The best practice is to use both wills and trusts. A trust delivers efficiency, privacy, and control for key assets; a will names guardians and ensures everything else follows the same plan.
| Feature | Will | Trust |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Instruction letter to the court | Legal contract |
| Takes effect | After death only | During lifetime or after death |
| Probate | Yes – court reviews and approves | No – bypasses probate |
| Privacy | Public record | Private |
| Time to settle | Months to years | Much faster |
| Cost | Court fees, attorney fees | Minimal ongoing costs |
| Can be changed? | Yes (anytime before death) | Yes (revocable trusts)No (irrevocable trusts) |
| Names guardians | Yes (minor children, pets) | No |
| Controls timing | Limited – all at once after death | Precise – by age, purpose, conditions |
| Incapacity planning | None | Yes – successor trustee steps in |
| Best for | Naming guardians, catching leftover assets | Major assets, privacy, control, avoiding probate |
Trusts aren't just for the ultra-wealthy; they are recommended for anyone who:
If your client meets the conditions above, here are some reasons to set up a trust:
Trusts are fundamental to comprehensive financial planning. They offer control, privacy, and probate avoidance for clients. For independent advisors and RIAs, understanding how a trust works helps you guide clients through important decisions.
Your role includes understanding trusts even if you don't create them. Help clients recognize when a trust makes sense. Know when to refer to professionals. Coordinate your financial advice with their legal strategy. The best estate plans integrate financial planning, tax strategy, and legal structure seamlessly.
Trusts aren't exclusively for ultra-wealthy clients. Any client with substantial assets or specific control goals should consider one. With proper planning, a trust becomes the centerpiece of a solid estate plan.
An insurance broker has admitted stealing $2.6 million that a New Jersey school district unknowingly paid for a nonexistent health care program.
On the heels of completing the reorganization of its fund group, Wells Fargo Funds Management LLC is setting its sights on product development and is looking specifically at retirement income products.
Wells Fargo Private Bank said that it has expanded its Elder Services program to the East Coast through its acquisition of Wachovia Securities LLC.
Goldman Sachs Asset Management's effort to expand its small defined-contribution business by offering custom target date funds has caught the attention of advisers.
The U.S. economy could well be headed for another downturn — and financial advisers should direct clients to move their money out of the domestic equities market and into long-range opportunities overseas and alternative-asset classes, two well-known investment managers said last week.
Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo are pushing their customers to buy more brokerage, savings and banking services from them as the weak economy and new regulations make it harder to earn money from loans and investment banking.
Custody may not be a particularly glamorous business. But Heidi Miller's successful stint at JPMorgan's securities services unit has cleared a path to the top for the Jamie Daimon loyalist.
Former brokers with disciplinary records are going to find it harder to cover their tracks if the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has its way. Today, the brokerage industry's self policing body proposed further expansion of broker information available through its free BrokerCheck service.
Dr. Loretta Mueller, 46, a family physician in New Jersey, was so unnerved by the Greek debt crisis and its effect on the stock market that she cashed out some of the funds in her retirement account and bought gold bullion.
With the federal estate tax law having lapsed — and no sign that Congress is planning to address the issue anytime soon — a growing number of states are taking matters into their own hands.
Davidson has her reasons, but estate tax isn't one of them, rep says
Actor Randy Quaid filed a lawsuit against his “trusted advisors” on Monday alleging that they defrauded him out of millions of dollars during a 20-year period.
In an age of automation, broker-dealers interested in alternative investments -- hedge funds, LLPs,, non-traded REITs and the like -- still rely on phone calls and faxes to conduct transactions. A new platform could change all that.
In 2009, only 59% of the millionaires said they had regained trust in their financial advisers, while 56% said they had the same feelings about their wealth management firms and financial institutions.