It will
probably cost more initially to set
up a well-drafted living trust than to have a will prepared. A true cost comparison
should include not only the expense to establish the will or trust, but also what
it will cost should you become incapacitated and after you die.
The Key Takeaways:
- A living trust document has more provisions than a will because it deals with issues while you are living and after you die, while a will only deals with issues that occur after your death.
- A properly prepared and funded living trust will avoid court proceedings at incapacity and death. A will provides no such protection and can, in fact, ensure court intervention at both events, which can be very costly (in time, privacy and dollars) to your family.
Instructions at Death
and Incapacity
Both a will and a living trust contain instructions for
distributing your assets after you die. But a living trust also contains your
instructions for managing your assets and your care should you become
incapacitated.
A Living Trust Avoids
the Costs of Court Interference at Incapacity and Death
A properly prepared and funded living trust (one that holds
all of your assets) will avoid the need for a court guardianship and/or
conservatorship if you become incapacitated. The person(s) you select will be
able to manage your care and your assets privately, with no court interference.
A will can only go into effect at your death, so it can
provide no instructions regarding incapacity. In that case, your family would almost
certainly have to ask the court to establish a guardianship and/or
conservatorship for your care and your assets—a process that is public, time
consuming, expensive and difficult to end.
What You Need to Know. The same living trust document that can
keep you out of a court guardianship at incapacity can also keep your family
out of probate court when you die. But a will must go through probate. Depending on where you live, this can be
costly and time consuming.
Costs to Transfer
Assets…Pay Now or Later
There may be some minor costs to transfer assets into your
living trust when you set it up, and then from your trust to your beneficiaries
after you die. But these will be minimal if you and your successor trustee do
much of the work yourselves. With a will, the probate court (with its costs and
attorney fees) is the only way to transfer your assets to your heirs after you
die. So you can pay now to set up
your trust and transfer titles, or you can pay the courts and attorneys to do
this for you after you die.
Actions to Consider
- Find out what probate costs are where you live. If your state has a fee schedule based on the value of probate assets, this will be fairly easy. If it has “reasonable” fees, ask an attorney to estimate what these fees would be if you die tomorrow and, if you are married, if your spouse dies the next day.
- Similarly, ask your attorney to estimate what the costs would be if you become incapacitated tomorrow and, if you are married, if your spouse becomes incapacitated the next day. (Practically speaking, this will be impossible to estimate because no one will be able to predict how long the incapacity will last or what complications might arise. The mere uncertainty of these costs should give you pause—and propel you to plan for incapacity.)
- Add these estimates to the cost of having a will prepared—and compare that to the cost of a living trust. When you make a true comparison, you may conclude that having a living trust actually costs less than a will.
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