Your parents paid thousands of dollars for a revocable trust but none of the assets were ever transferred into it. Did their estate planning attorney make a mistake?
In this episode of The Death Readiness Podcast, Jill Mastroianni explains what it actually means to fund a trust, why this step is essential for the plan to work, and who is typically responsible for doing it. She also walks through a real-world example showing how failing to fund a trust can cost families hundreds of thousands of dollars in probate fees and create a huge administrative burden for adult children.
More importantly, Jill highlights the hidden emotional cost when estate planning work falls on family members instead of being handled during the parent’s lifetime.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
What “Funding a Trust” Actually Means. A trust agreement by itself does not control your assets. For the trust to work, assets must be retitled in the name of the trust. If assets remain titled in an individual’s name, they may still go through probate, even if a trust exists.
Why People Create Revocable Trusts. Revocable trusts are commonly used for two main purposes:(1) Asset Management During Life--A trust allows a successor trustee (often an adult child) to step in and help manage finances if the creator of the trust becomes ill or cognitively impaired, and (2)Avoiding Probate --Assets properly titled in a trust can pass directly to beneficiaries without going through the court-supervised probate process.
Why Trust Funding Gets Overlooked. Many families believe their estate plan is finished once the documents are signed. But drafting the estate planning documents and implementing the estate plan are two different steps. Common reasons funding doesn’t happen include: clients assume the attorney handles everything, attorneys expect the client to complete the transfers, financial institutions make the process difficult, and the administrative work simply gets postponed.
The Emotional Cost for Adult Children. Adult children often end up acting as: administrative assistants, financial coordinators, and the ones responsible for communicating with customer service representatives at banks and insurance companies, all while balancing their own work, families, and responsibilities. Good estate planning should reduce that burden, not create it.
Who Should Handle Trust Funding?
Attorneys typically draft the documents, but they may not handle the administrative work of transferring every asset in the trust. Funding a trust often involves contacting financial institutions, completing transfer paperwork, updating beneficiary designations, retitling property, and coordinating insurance policies. Because this work is time-consuming, Jill recommends working with a specialist who focuses on trust funding. Jill recommends Mollie Lacher at Sunny Care Services, LLC: https://sunnycareservices.com/
Simplifying Your Financial Life. Jill also recommends simplifying financial accounts. Having assets spread across multiple institutions can make trust funding, and future management, much harder. Working with a financial advisor and consolidating accounts can help reduce administrative complexity, ensure required minimum distributions are handled correctly, and make it easier for a successor trustee or family member to step in if needed. Jill recommends Blair Martin at RW Baird: https://lexingtondt.bairdwealth.com/team/blair-c-martin
Resources & Links
Episode 38, Why You Need (or Don’t Need) a Will in the show notes: https://www.deathreadiness.com/podcast/why-you-need-or-dont-need-a-will
Episode 19, Why You Need (or Don’t Need) a Trust: https://www.deathreadiness.com/podcast/episode-19-how-to-know-if-you-need-a-trust
Mollie Lacher, Sunny Care Services, LLC: https://sunnycareservices.com/
Blair Martin, RW Baird: https://lexingtondt.bairdwealth.com/team/blair-c-martin
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This podcast provides estate planning guidance for women and discusses real, practical issues, from caregiving, pre-planning a funeral, how to avoid probate using beneficiary designations, planning for individuals with special needs (and special needs trusts), whether you need a professional fiduciary (trustee or executor), how the estate tax works and how to preserve your legacy.
Tuesday Triage episodes answer questions from listeners like you, from powers of attorney, healthcare advance directives (and whether they work when you’re pregnant), what a Last Will and Testament really is, whether you need a trust, how Medicaid works and how to have senior and elder care conversations and how to care for aging parents.
Disclaimer: This podcast and all related content are for educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is established here. Use of this information without careful analysis and review by your attorney, CPA, and/or financial advisor may cause serious adverse consequences. For legal guidance tailored to your unique situation, consult with a licensed attorney in your state.