Trusts 101 - Estate Planning With Trusts - YouTube

Channel: Family & Aging Law Center PLLC

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Hi everybody, attorney Nicole Wipp here with the Family & Aging Law Center.
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Today I'm going to go over a little bit with you about trusts.
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I call this Trusts 101.
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It's really just an overview about what are trusts and what are they going to do for you,
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and a little bit about the different types of trusts.
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The reason I'm doing this is because I know there's a lot of confusion about what trusts
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really are out there, because I've literally talked to hundreds if not thousands of people
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about trusts.
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I'm not going to get into real specifics about trusts, but I'm just going to give you this
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overview.
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So let's get started.
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The first question really is, what is a trust?
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Right?
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What is it even?
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The legalese of the answer is that it's a contract between the grantor, which is the
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person that creates the trusts, like usually if it's your trust, you are the grantor; the
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trustee, who is the person that manages the trust, it might be you, it could be somebody
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else, and the beneficiaries, who are the people that are going to benefit from the trust either
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during your life or after your death.
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That's the legalese.
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What I'll tell you is that a trust is your rulebook, your rulebook, okay?
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This is important because if you don't make your rulebook, you're going to get the rulebook
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that the state gives you, okay?
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You're going to follow the state's rules.
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So you can make your own rulebook, but you have to create it, and that's what a trust
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is for.
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All right, so there's two main types of trusts.
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When I say this, what I mean is, in the whole world of trusts, there are two very general
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categories of what trusts are.
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The first one is what we would consider to be death trusts, also known as testamentary
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trusts.
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These are trusts that are created in a will.
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So the will says, "Upon my death this trust is created."
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Okay?
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But the trust doesn't exist during your life, because it's in your will and your will is
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a death document.
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It doesn't come into being, the trust, until after your death.
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It doesn't transition control of assets in the event of a disability.
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So if you're alive and you get sick, this type of trust, a testamentary trust, doesn't
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enable somebody to take control of your assets in a disability situation.
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And almost always it's going to require a probate court proceeding because it's created
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in a will, a will is inherently a document intended for probate, it's going to require
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a probate proceeding to create this trust.
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That's what's a death trust or a testamentary trust.
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So for this reason, a lot of people don't feel that these are very desirable, right?
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These don't sound like really great things for most of us.
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So that's why we usually when we're talking about trusts, are talking about things that
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are living trusts.
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What this means is that a living trust is a trust that exists during your life, okay?
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Unlike a testamentary trust that doesn't exist until after you're dead.
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It shifts control in the easiest way possible upon your death or disability, okay?
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So, unlike the testamentary trust, a living trust does allow the person that you say gets
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to be the trustee after you, to take control of your assets that are in the trust upon
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your disability or even death.
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And if you properly fund it, and I'm going to talk about this in a second, a living trust
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avoids probate, which is really probably the biggest reason why people like trusts, okay?
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Living trusts come in two categories: revocable and irrevocable.
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So let's talk about that.
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Revocable and irrevocable living trusts are definitely two totally different legal strategies
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and they accomplish different goals.
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With revocable living trusts, which is the most common, by the way, when people call
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me or people talk to me and they say, "I already have a trust."
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9.9 times out of 10 it's a revocable living trust, okay?
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We use these almost, I'd say, mostly for probate avoidance, right?
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The main reason people put together a revocable living trust is to avoid probate.
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Also, I look at a very good reason to have a revocable living trust is so that you can
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shift control in the easiest way possible when you get sick or if you get sick or upon
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your death.
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So that's what revocable living trusts basically two main reasons you'd put one together.
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They are private if you keep them that way.
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So we can keep privacy amongst our family or people that we trust.
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We don't have to go through a court proceeding, which is one of the big things that makes
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it private.
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And if you have a properly structured revocable living trust, it can provide asset protection
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to your loved ones after your death.
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This is key, not during your life, after your death.
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It's important to understand, and this is one of the biggest misconceptions about revocable
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living trusts out there, revocable living trusts do not provide asset protection to
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you during your life.
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If it's your trust, a revocable living trust is not intended to provide asset protection.
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So, one of the biggest complaints I hear from people or people get upset a lot of times,
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is because they believe that their revocable living trust provides them asset protection.
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You just need to understand that that is almost entirely not true, and that's not the purpose
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of it, that's not what it's meant to do.
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So don't go around thinking that that's what's happening, if in fact you have a revocable
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living trust.
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But that's part of the reason why there are these irrevocable living trusts.
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Once again, we create them while we're alive but they're mostly used for just tax planning
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and then asset protection.
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Generally, irrevocable trusts are really used for very wealthy people, because they create
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a lot of restrictions that a lot of people just don't want to accept.
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But we can create irrevocable trusts that don't have those restrictions, but I would
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say generally that's not the way that they're drafted by a lawyer.
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So they do give asset protection to you during your life, and your loved ones after death,
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if they're properly written.
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We can protect assets from the nursing home, from predators, lawsuits, all kinds of things,
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with irrevocable trusts or types of irrevocable trusts.
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So it can provide asset protection to you during your life, unlike the revocable living
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trust.
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But when we're talking about trusts it's really, really, really, really, really, really important
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to understand that if you have a trust you want to use a trust instead of beneficiary
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designations, okay?
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This is so common.
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People will have a trust and they'll have beneficiary designations simultaneously.
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There generally is not a good reason for this.
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It really can cause a lot of problems for you and your family members in the future.
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Because, this is the thing, if you have assets, like your 401(k), your IOA, and there's beneficiaries
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on them, on your bank accounts, you have transfer on death or payable on death, these are all
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beneficiary designations.
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They are not going to pass according to your will or your trust, they're not, they're going
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to pass according to that beneficiary designation.
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So, this is confusing to people sometimes because they think, "Well, my trust says that
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everything's going to happen they way my trust says."
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But that's not the way it works when you have beneficiary designations.
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So it's very important to understand this.
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This is an improper way to fund a trust.
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We don't want to have a beneficiary designation to people.
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We'd want the trust to be the beneficiary most of the time.
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A lot of times what will happen is, people will go to the bank or they'll go to their
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financial planner and they'll say, "Well, you're all set.
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I did your beneficiary designations for you."
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I'd just challenge that because that a lot of times is bad advice.
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You're not necessarily all set because your beneficiary designations are not going to
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create the same type of plan that your estate plan, whether it's your will or your trust,
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would do.
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So I would challenge that statement.
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You know, when you're talking to people at your bank or you're talking to your financial
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planner, you have to understand, they're probably well-meaning, but they're not lawyers, and
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they're telling you only a very small piece of the story.
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The small piece of the story they're not telling you, because they're not lawyers and they
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don't deal with this stuff, is that they don't explain to you that your beneficiary designations
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aren't going to protect your assets if your children get divorced, your children or your
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beneficiary gets divorced, gets sued, if they are bad with money, have poor spending habits,
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if they're in bad money relationships, right?
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Like the wife that goes and spends all the money, or the husband that goes and spends
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all the money.
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It's not going to protect your money from those things.
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If they're having issues with addiction, or they're not able to manage their own affairs
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because they're sick, right?
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They need nursing home care or they're sick or they have a disability, or they have creditors,
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are going through bankruptcy.
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Any of those kinds of things.
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Beneficiary designations do not protect from any of these things.
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That's why I'm saying, if somebody tells you that you're all set with your beneficiary
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designation, well, you're not all set with all of these things.
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And a lot of times, at least with my clients, they want to be all set with these things.
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So that's why you want to have both a properly written and funded trust, because it can protect
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your money.
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But you have to have the right kind of trust.
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That's also why finding your trust is critically important.
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So what is funding the trust?
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Well, funding the trust is the process of moving your assets into your trust.
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This gets a little confusing for people sometimes.
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Imagine that you have a bowl and you've got fruit in your bowl, right?
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If you take an orange and it's outside of the bowl and you put it inside the bowl, is
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it still an orange?
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Of course it is, right?
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I'm not trying to trick you.
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So it's just like the way that the trust works.
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A trust is like the bowl, it's a vessel.
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The orange is your bank account.
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You put the bank account inside the bowl or inside your trust, it's still your bank account.
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Just like an orange is still an orange.
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But you need to get it in there.
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And that's the thing that most people are not doing, even people that have trusts, is
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they're not funding their trusts.
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So it's really important to understand that if your assets are not held by your trust,
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the trust isn't worth the paper it's written on.
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You have an expensive legal document that is not actually doing anything for you.
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So it's really important, in fact, it's critical to fund your trust.
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Also, understand that when your trust is unfunded, a lot of times what this means is that you're
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going to end up in probate anyway.
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So the reason that you set up the trust is not even going to happen.
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Your trust is going to be empty and it's not going to protect your assets from probate.
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So, unfunded trust is probate, that's a big thumbs down, we don't want that.
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This is just a really quick Trusts 101.
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I knew I just threw a lot of information at you.
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But if you have questions, call or come on in to my office, watch more of my videos,
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learn more.
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It's really important to understand these concepts so that you make good legal decisions
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in the future!