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Home » Wills and Trusts » 5 Steps Involved in Creating a Trust

5 Steps Involved in Creating a Trust

November 6, 2018 by Larry Parman, Attorney at Law

creating a trust

Historically, trusts were used almost exclusively by wealthy families to guard family wealth and pass it down from one generation to the next. Over time, however, trusts evolved to become much more useful to the average person. Consequently, trusts are now among the most common additions to the average estate plan. Always consult with an estate planning attorney before making decisions about your estate plan; however, the following five steps involved in creating a trust may be beneficial to consider if you are planning on incorporating a trust into your estate plan.

Creating a Trust

  1. Define your purpose. This is the critical first step in creating a trust. Because trusts have evolved so much, there is now a specialized trust to help meet almost any estate planning goal. Before you can begin to create your trust, therefore, you need to narrow down your goals. Every trust must have a trust purpose that can ultimately be referred to by the Trustee, or even a judge if necessary, when making critical decisions relating to the trust. Is your trust purpose to protect assets? Guard your child’s inheritance? Gift to charity? Narrow down your trust purpose as much as possible and write it out.
  2. Name your beneficiaries. Often, this is the easiest part if you are creating a trust specifically to gift assets to loved ones. Other times, however, deciding on the beneficiaries can be more complicated. For example, if you are creating a charitable trust, you may spend a significant amount of time deciding on your beneficiaries.
  3. Decide which type of trust you need. All trusts fit into one of two categories – testamentary or living (inter vivos) trusts.  Testamentary trusts are typically activated by a provision in your Last Will and Testament and, therefore, do not become active during your lifetime. Conversely, a living trust, activates during your lifetime.  Living trusts can be sub-divided into revocable and irrevocable living trusts. If the trust is a revocable living trust, as the name implies, the person creating the trust can modify or terminate the trust at any time and for any reason.  In contrast, if you create an irrevocable living trust you cannot modify or revoke the trust at any time, nor for any reason, once active. Testamentary trusts are always revocable because the Last Will that triggers activation is always revocable until the Testator’s death. To a large extent, your trust purpose, determined in step one, will dictate which type of trust you need to create.
  4. Choose your Trustee. Your Trustee is responsible for managing and investing trust assets as well as administering the trust. The duties and responsibilities of a Trustee are numerous and diverse, requiring you to spend a considerable amount of time deciding who to appoint as your Trustee.  Ideally, your Trustee should have a legal and/or financial background to ensure that he/she is capable of administering the trust successfully. Depending on the size and complexity of your trust, choosing a professional Trustee may be your best option.
  5. Draft the trust agreement and fund your trust. Your estate planning attorney will actually draft the trust; however, as the creator of the trust (“Settlor”, “Trustor” or “Grantor”) of the trust, you will decide on the terms to be used to administer the trust. You will use those terms to decide when assets can be distributed, how assets should be invested, and how much discretion you want your Trustee to have, among other things. As the Settlor, you can include any terms you wish as long as they are not illegal, impossible, or unconscionable. Finally, you need to fund your trust. This can be as simple as transferring cash into the trust or as complex as re-titling real property into the name of the trust.

Contact Oklahoma Trust Attorneys

For additional information, please join us for an upcoming FREE seminar. If you have additional questions or concerns regarding the steps involved in creating a trust in Oklahoma, or you are ready to get started creating your own trust, contact the experienced Oklahoma estate planning attorneys at Parman & Easterday by calling 405-843-6100 to schedule your appointment today.

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Larry Parman, Attorney at Law
Larry Parman, Attorney at Law
Founder and Owner at Parman & Easterday
After helping his own family deal with a lengthy probate and the IRS following his father’s untimely death in a farm accident, Larry Parman made a decision to help families create effective estate plans designed to reduce taxes, minimize legal interference with the transfer of assets to one’s heirs, and protect his clients’ assets from predators and creditors.
Larry Parman, Attorney at Law
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