This summary provides a simple description of a Living Trust and how it works.
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Simply Put
Simply put, a living trust is a written agreement between two parties. The trustor or grantor establishes the trust and the bank, person, or persons who manage it, is the trustee or trustees
The trust agreement details how the trust operates during the grantor's life and what happens to the assets following his or her death. Extreme care must be taken when considering the elements of the trust, and the written agreement that describes its operation will specify in detail who receives the assets when the trust terminates, any payments that can be made from the trust, and who will serve as trustee and successor trustee.
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Features of a Living Trust
As long as the grantor survives, the trust is a revocable trust. During this period, the grantor may amend the trust in any way he or she wants, can add or subtract to existing assets, buy and sell any of the assets held by the trust, or even revoke it. A trust amendment, signed by the grantor, will indicate any changes made to the original trust.
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Keeping Tax and Asset Records
There is no legal requirement to keep any records of the trust while the grantor is alive and the trust is revocable. While the trust typically will include a list of assets originally placed in the trust, any additions or subtractions should be included because when the grantor dies, the successor trustee needs to know exactly what the trust contains.
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Income Tax Effects and Tax Returns
No separate tax return is required for the trust as long as the grantor serves as its trustee or co-trustee and the trust is revocable.
Federal Estate Tax Returns:
The trust will carry the Social Security Number of the trust's creator, who will continue to report all taxable income and deductions on his or her personal tax return, including all dividends, capital gains, interest, and other taxable income. No reference to the trust is required on the personal tax return, and none should be made.
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Titling of Trust Assets
Assets must be placed in the trust for it to function. To do this, the assets must be registered in the name of the trustee. As an example, the title or registration of an asset would be changed to "Ann B. Smith, trustee of the Ann B. Smith Trust, dated September 13, 2008."
If real property is included in the trust, deeds must have their title recorded, a process that does not trigger a real estate tax reassessment. Stock certificates need to be re-recorded and mailed to transfer agents, and a similar process is required for any bonds. Banks need to have their accounts changed, and stock brokerage accounts must be transferred to the trustee, in his or her name for those assets to be included in trust.
To make the trust the beneficiary of any existing life insurance policy, the policy needs to be changed to name the trustee as beneficiary. Doing so will place the proceeds of the policy into the trust at the time of the insured's death.
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