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Advantages of a Living Trust

A living trust is when you give ownership of your assets and estate to a trust, without giving up your own rights to the property. The following article explains the advantages of living trusts.

Advantages of a Living Trust
Whether or not you want to create a living trust is a deeply personal choice and all aspects of such a decision, both good and bad, need to be fully considered. A living trust is when yougive ownership of your assets and estate to a trust, without giving up your own rights to the property while you are still alive. You can still manage or change the trust as you see fit. As long as you are living, the trust will be under your control (or the control of your trustee if you are incapacitated).

To decide whether or not you should create a living trust, you first need to determine what the advantages are for your specific situation. We have created three steps that will help you to decide:


Read the following statements and jot down which ones apply to you:

A) It is important to me to avoid estate taxes;
B) Avoiding estate taxes is not a big factor in my decision.

A) It is important to me that my estate does not go through probate;
B) Avoiding probate is not a big factor in my decision.

A) I prefer privacy from the courts and public records;
B) Privacy is not an issue for me.

A) I want as much control as possible over what happens to my estate after I pass, without interference from the courts;
B) I want to make many of the decisions, but would not have a problem with my decisions being overturned in court.

A) I want the ability to elect a third party to oversee my estate, so that they can make decisions for me in the event that I am incapacitated;
B) I don't want to elect a third party to oversee my estate if I cannot.

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Click here to read the rest of the article at HowToDoThings.com
Author: Julie Bonner



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