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Living Trusts and Avoiding Probate
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Living Trust FAQ


An introduction to living trusts -- a popular way to avoid probate.

What is a living trust?

Why should I make a living trust?

How does a living trust avoid probate?

Is it expensive to create a living trust?

Is it a hassle to hold property in a living trust?

Is a living trust document ever made public, like a will?

Does a living trust protect property from creditors?

»  If I make a living trust, do I still need a will?

Can a living trust reduce estate taxes?

If I make a living trust, do I still need a will?

Yes, you do -- and here's why:

A will is an essential back-up device for property that you don't transfer to yourself as trustee. For example, if you acquire property shortly before you die, you may not think to transfer ownership of it to your trust -- which means that it won't pass under the terms of the trust document. But in your will, you can include a clause that names someone to get all of the property that you haven't left to a specific beneficiary.

If you don't have a will, any property that isn't transferred by your living trust or other probate-avoidance device (such as joint tenancy) will go to your closest relatives in an order determined by state law. These laws may not distribute property in the way you would have chosen.

For more on wills, see Wills FAQ.

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