
In the first part of this series, we discussed a unique planning tool known as a Lifetime Asset Protection Trust. Here we explain the benefits of these trusts in further detail.
If you’re planning to leave your children an inheritance of any amount, you likely want to do everything you can to protect what you leave behind from being lost or squandered.
While most lawyers will advise you to distribute the assets you’re leaving to your kids outright at specific ages and stages, based on when you think they will be mature enough to handle an inheritance, there is a much better choice for safeguarding your family wealth.
A Lifetime Asset Protection Trust is a unique estate planning vehicle that’s specifically designed to protect your children’s inheritance from unfortunate life events such as divorce, debt, illness, and accidents. At the same time, you can give your children the ability to access and invest their inheritance, while retaining airtight asset protection for their entire lives.
Today, we’ll look at the Trustee’s role in the process and how these unique trusts can teach your kids to manage and grow their inheritance, so it can support your children to become wealth creators and enrich future generations.
Total discretion for the Trustee offers airtight asset protection
Most trusts require the Trustee to distribute assets to beneficiaries in a structured way, such as at certain ages or stages. Other times, a Trustee is required to distribute assets only for specific purposes, such as for the beneficiary’s “health, education, maintenance, and support,” also known as the “HEMS” standard.
In contrast, a Lifetime Asset Protection Trust gives the Trustee full discretion on whether to make distributions or not. The Trust leaves the decision of whether to release trust assets totally up to the Trustee. The Trustee has full authority to determine how and when the assets should be released based on the beneficiary’s needs and the circumstances going on in his or her life at the time.
For example, if your child was in the process of getting divorced or in the middle of a lawsuit, the Trustee would refuse to distribute any funds. Therefore, the Trust assets remain shielded from a future ex-spouse or a potential judgment creditor, should your child be ordered to pay damages resulting from a lawsuit.
What’s more, because the Trustee controls access to the inheritance, those assets are not only protected from outside threats like ex-spouses and creditors, but from your child’s own poor judgment, as well. For example, if your child develops a substance abuse or gambling problem, the Trustee could withhold distributions until he or she receives the appropriate treatment.
A lifetime of guidance and support
Given that distributions from a Lifetime Asset Protection Trust are 100% up to the Trustee, you may be concerned about the Trustee’s ability to know when to make distributions to your child and when to withhold them. Granting such power is vital for asset protection, but it also puts a lot of pressure on the Trustee, and you probably don’t want your named Trustee making these decisions in a vacuum.
To address this issue, you can write up guidelines to the Trustee,
providing the Trustee with direction about how you’d like the trust assets to
be used for your beneficiaries. This ensures the Trustee is aware of your
values and wishes when making distributions, rather than simply guessing what
you would’ve wanted, which often leads to problems down the road.
In fact, many of our clients add guidelines describing how they’d choose to
make distributions in up to 10 different scenarios. These scenarios might
involve the purchase of a home, a wedding, the start of a business, and/or travel.
An educational opportunity
Beyond these benefits, a Lifetime Asset Protection Trust can also be set up to give
your child hands-on experience managing financial matters, like investing,
running a business, and charitable giving. And he or she will learn how to do
these things with support from the Trustee you’ve chosen to guide them.
This is accomplished by adding provisions to the trust that allow your child to
become a Co-Trustee at a predetermined age. Serving alongside the original
Trustee, your child will have the opportunity to invest and manage the trust
assets under the supervision and tutelage of a trusted mentor.
You can even allow your child to become Sole Trustee later in life, once he or
she has gained enough experience and is ready to take full control. As Sole
Trustee, your child would be able to resign and replace themselves with an
independent trustee, if necessary, for continued asset protection.
Future generations
Regardless of whether or not your child becomes Co-Trustee or Sole Trustee,
a Lifetime Asset Protection Trust gives you the opportunity to turn your
child’s inheritance into a teaching tool.
Do you want to give your child the ability to leave trust assets to a surviving
spouse or a charity upon their death? Or would you prefer that the assets are
only distributed to his or her biological or adopted children? You might even
want your child to create their own Lifetime Asset Protection Trust for their
heirs.
Dedicated to empowering your family, building your wealth and defining your legacy,

Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!