Trusts in Financial and Gift Planning

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Trusts in Financial and Gift Planning Maximizing Your Benefits The Benefits of Trusts A trust can produce beneficial results in your estate and gift planning. In many cases, a trust can add significantly to the financial security you want to provide for your family and loved ones. There are many different types of trusts that can help save on estate taxes and probate costs or produce meaningful income tax savings. Most important, trusts enable you to control the use and disposition of property for many years after your death. Charitable trusts also provide the opportunity to make major gifts to important philanthropic causes without compromising your personal income or the security you want to provide for your family. Let s look at some of the major advantages (and some disadvantages) of trusts and the tremendous flexibility they can bring to your planning.

2 What Is a Trust? A trust is an agreement between you and your trustee. You transfer legal ownership of specified properties to the trustee. The trustee then invests and disposes of the properties according to the agreement. Clearly, the trust agreement is the foundation for the whole arrangement. Drafted by your attorney, the trust agreement: Defines how the trustee is to invest the property Provides directions for the payment or accumulation of income earned by the trust Names one or more immediate beneficiaries and defines their benefits and rights Directs how long the trust will last and how the trust property will be distributed when the trust term ends Defines the rights of all beneficiaries and the rights and obligations of the trustee Defines your rights (if any) to change or modify the agreement, to receive income or other distributions, to change the trustee, etc. In short, the trust agreement is a specific plan for the management, investment, and use of the trust property. Each trust agreement is written to accomplish the specific objectives of the person creating the trust. Taking the time to plan and draft the trust agreement, to choose the right person to serve as trustee, and to provide flexibility to meet changing conditions and circumstances are keys to a successful trust plan. Let s first discuss testamentary trusts (trusts created by will), then we ll turn to revocable and irrevocable trusts created during life. A Trust in Your Will In your will, you can direct that all or part of your estate be held in trust for specified family members or other beneficiaries. For example, rather than leaving property outright to your spouse, your will can direct that the property be held in trust for the benefit of your spouse for his or her life, and distributed equally among your children at the death of your spouse. Whatever provisions you make, the trustee will receive the property at your death. The trustee will technically own the property, but will use the income and principal for your beneficiaries in exact accordance with the directions set forth in the trust document. What can a testamentary trust accomplish for your beneficiaries? 1. It can free your spouse or other beneficiaries from investment and management responsibilities. 2. It permits you to determine the ultimate beneficiaries of your estate. 3. It gives you control over how your beneficiaries will use and enjoy your property. In your trust agreement (activated through your will), you can provide that your immediate beneficiaries are to receive a specified amount, or the income produced by the trust, or income and whatever amounts of principal are requested or needed by the beneficiaries.

3 In short, you can provide very broad or very narrow benefits for the trust beneficiaries. Further, you can name several beneficiaries even give the trustee discretion to sprinkle income among the beneficiaries as their needs vary. It is impossible to say what constitutes a typical trust arrangement. Your beneficiaries may be minors, spendthrifts, elderly, wealthy, or wholly dependent on trust income for their support. The directions to the trustee for making distributions to your beneficiaries should be based on all factors, including your own objectives and preferences. This much is clear: With a carefully planned and drafted testamentary trust, you can accomplish specific objectives almost as effectively after death as during your life. Compare creating a trust to making outright bequests. Which will be better for your family? Which will better accomplish your personal objectives? Do keep in mind that a testamentary trust can provide a good income to a family member and a deferred gift to our organization (we ll discuss the charitable remainder trust later). You can also create a trust that will provide an annual income to our institution, with the property passing to family members at the end of the specified number of years (this is called a charitable lead trust). This helps you to pass your estate to family members sheltered in whole or in part from federal estate taxes. The Living Revocable Trust You create a living revocable trust during your life to manage your affairs and control the disposition of your estate after your death. Except for the timing of its creation, it is very much like a testamentary trust and offers virtually the same advantages. In addition, because the trust is created during your life, it provides other features that may make it attractive in your estate planning. Typically, the creator of a living revocable trust reserves the right to receive all the trust income for life, to add or remove property from the trust, and to modify or cancel the whole trust arrangement at any time. In other words, you can change a living revocable trust at any time during your life; but at your death, it becomes an effective plan for the management and disposition of your estate. Example: Bob has created a living revocable trust that is fairly typical. His reasons for creating the trust illustrate some of the features that have made the living revocable trust such a popular planning tool. Step One: Bob works with his attorney to develop a comprehensive plan for the disposition of his estate. His major concern is to provide financial security for his wife Anne. To accomplish this, his trust agreement provides that after his death Anne will receive all trust income for as long as she lives. In addition, the trustee will pay out as much principal as Anne needs for her health, support and maintenance. The agreement gives the trustee discretion to handle Anne s financial affairs in the event of her illness or incapacity. It also authorizes the trustee to pay certain amounts from the principal to any of Bob s children to meet emergency financial needs. At Anne s death, the trust property will be divided equally among the children. Step Two: Bob transfers most of his investments and other assets to the trust, and names the trust as beneficiary of his life insurance and retirement plan benefits. Bob reserves the right to change the terms or cancel the arrangement at any time. It is important to note that even though the trust legally owns most of Bob s assets, Bob is in full control. In fact, Bob could have served as

4 the trustee himself (with a named successor trustee to take over in the event of his death or incapacity). But even though Bob is not the trustee, his right to change the terms or cancel the trust agreement gives him complete control. There are four basic reasons for creating a living revocable trust instead of a testamentary trust: 1. To minimize probate costs at death. Properties transferred to the trust during life are not usually part of the probate estate and not subject to probate at death. The savings are often substantial. 2. To ensure property will be productive and available to family immediately after death. Property passing through probate can be tied up for months or even years, but trust property is not subject to the same probate delays. Present investments are continued and both income and principal are immediately available to distribute under the terms of the trust. 3. To avoid public scrutiny of the estate plan. Unlike a will, which becomes a matter of public record once it enters probate, the trust agreement is private and not available for public examination. 4. To free the trust creator and beneficiaries from day-to-day investment and management responsibilities. Most important, if the trust creator names a professional trustee, the trustee will continue to prudently handle all trust property in the event of death, disability or incompetence. The Benefits of a Charitable Remainder Trust So far, we have emphasized how trusts can benefit you and your family. A special kind of trust the charitable remainder trust allows you to benefit qualified charitable organizations as well as family members, and may even enhance your tax and financial benefits if you meet certain legal requirements You, as the donor and the creator of the charitable remainder trust, can gain: An income for life An immediate and substantial income tax charitable deduction Freedom from the responsibilities of investing the trust assets (if you choose another person or entity as the trustee) Avoidance of an immediate capital gains tax when you transfer appreciated property to the trust You can also name family members as lifetime beneficiaries of the trust. They could enjoy greater financial security because of a reduction in probate costs, state inheritance taxes, and federal estate taxes. In your trust agreement, you would name our institution as the remainder beneficiary. We will eventually receive all the property left in the trust after income payments to you and family members end. In many cases, a charitable remainder trust can be an excellent planning tool for you and your family, as well as a means of making a generous future gift that can help shape the future of our institution.

5 Let Us Hear from You We encourage you to contact us with any questions or for a more detailed discussion of the various trust forms. Of course, it is always prudent to have your own attorney or advisor help plan and draft the trusts that can be so important in your planning. If you want to remember us in your plans, we can help you plan a charitable bequest or trust that will provide you with both the greatest tax and financial benefits and the greatest personal satisfaction. 219.879.0327 888.898.6489 Fax: 219.210.3881 unity@uflc.net www.uflc.net TIF1013