12Law Arrow 12Law Arrow  Easy Questions  
12Law Arrow 12Law Arrow Instant Legal Documents
 
Protect Your Family Today
with a Free Last Will & Testament
  • Finish and print in minutes!
  • Personalized for You
  • Written by expert Attorneys
  • Valid & Legal for Florida

Benefits of a Living Trust in Lake Worth, FL

Benefits of a Living Trust in Lake Worth, FL


If you want to really know what your friends and family think of you die broke, and then see who shows up for the funeral.
 
- Gregory Nunn


You can make your own basic Living Trust or create a living trust jointly with your spouse. There are many available types of living trust, though some are complicated and can only be used for certain circumstances.

Creating a Living Trust Online

  • Bypass Living Trust: This can be used for married couples with a combined estate that can surpass the estate tax threshold.
  • Special Need Living Trust: Leaving a property to someone with disability.
  • Spendthrift living trust: The beneficiary is someone deemed unable to control his spending and who cannot be trusted to manage money. This living trust will control the beneficiary's ability to spend money.

The Essentials in Creating a Living Trust

You need to decide the following before you begin building your online living trust documents at 12Law.com:

  • List of your beneficiaries
  • List of back up beneficiaries
  • List of young beneficiaries that require guardianship and property management until they reach adulthood
  • First and second choice of successor trustee


  • How to Create a Living Trust

    • Use 12Law.com to create your online living trust document. It shouldn't take long to think through what you want in this important legal document
    • Have your living trust document notarized. Sign your document in front of a notary public. Usually, banks offer free notary services
    • Transfer property into your living trust. Depending on the type of property you are transferring to your living trust, the transfer may take a few weeks to take effect. All property with a title or deed needs to have the title or deed documents updated. This step is absolutely essential.

    How to Change or Revoke Your Living Trust

    Restating or revoking your living trust by adding or removing property is done by transferring your property ownership back to yourself, updating the list of living trust property attached to the trust document and also by revising the property titles.


    When to Use a Living Trust

    Making a revocable living trust can fulfill your wish of giving your property to the beneficiaries of your choice. A living trust avoids any possibility of having the estate tied up in probate (a big advantage over a Last Will and Testament).

    A living trust can spare your family from the expense and delay of a probate that is common when using a will. It can prevent probate from tying up your real estate and other miscellaneous assets. If you have money in a bank, brokerage, and other retirement accounts it would be effective to name "payable-on-death" beneficiaries for each account.

    A living trust can ensure that what you bequeath remains confidential, except when it comes to real estate transfers that can be made public. Making a living trust is not much more complicated than making a will. The important thing to note, however, is to make sure that ownership of all the property you have indicated in the living trust document is legally transferred to the trust, with you as the trustee.

    It may be a good idea to appoint another trustee for the living trust., in case you become incapacitated. He or she will take care of your financial affairs when you are incapable of doing it and will take over the management of the trust assets after you die. The absence of a living trust will make the court arrange someone to take over the affairs you left behind.


    Individual or Shared Living Trusts for Couples

    A Living Trust can be individual or shared. Couples can make a probate-avoiding trust together as a shared living trust. This is preferable especially if you have large, jointly held assets. Needing to divide up the jointly owned property is avoided. Shared living trusts can also be useful to bequeath property to a surviving spouse.

    When one grantor dies, the property left to the surviving spouse stays in the living trust and does not need to be transferred. In the case of individual living trusts, the property left to the survivor has to be transferred from the living trust of the grantee to the survivors then to avoid probate, again placed in the survivor's living trust. Individual trusts may make sense in certain circumstances:

  • Both of you have signed an agreement that each spouse's earning and other income are separate and each of you wants to keep your property separately
  • You are newly married with little or no property together
  • You owned property before marriage and don't want it comingled with assets you will acquire together during the marriage. You will be in sole control of your own trust property.
  • Community Property States. Decisions you make may be affected by the community property laws of your state. This law states that, as a general rule, spouses should share income acquired during marriage 50-50. Properties earned during the marriage are a community property regardless of the name in the title.
  • Non- Community Property States. The name stated in the title document is considered the owner of that property. If you acquire property together, consider a shared living trust. If you own separate property, then an individual living trust may be appropriate for one or both of you
  •  
    Download & Print a Free FL Living Trust Personalize This Document
    Page 1
      Answer Easy
    Questions
    answer simple questions online step by step
    Easy Questions, Instant Documents
    • Finish in Minutes
    • Download Immediately
    • Written by Attorneys
    • 100% Guaranteed
      Get Instant Legal
        Documents

    Print, save or email your finished legal document immediately!
    Last Will & Testament
    Related Legal Services near Lake Worth, FL
    Russ E Robbins Law Offices
    17 N H St
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 362-9921
    Attorneys Referral & Information Service, Attorneys, Legal Service Plans
    Fried Law Firm, P.A.
    10104 Dover Carriage Ln
    Lake Worth, FL 33449
    (561) 317-9821
    Mon-Fri 9am-7pm, Sat Closed, Sun Closed
    Hall Stephen W
    1520 10th Ave N # F
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 533-9706
    Estate Planning Attorneys, Attorneys, Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning Attorneys
    Resch Betty C
    521 Lake Ave
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 533-8118
    Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning Attorneys,  Attorneys,  Family Law Attorneys,  Administrative & Gov
    Levine Wayne M
    2328 10th Ave N
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 582-8077
    Immigration Law Attorneys,  Attorneys,  Immigration & Naturalization Consultants,  General Practice
    Shannon J. Sagan, P.A.
    101 N J St Ste 2
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 533-7800
    Accident & Property Damage Attorneys, Personal Injury Law Attorneys, Legal Service Plans
    Nelson Hunter Law Firm, P.A.
    8461 Lake Worth Rd
    Lake Worth, FL 33467
    (561) 909-7622
    Bankruptcy Law Attorneys,  Credit & Debt Counseling,  Insurance Adjusters,  Legal Service Plans,  Ba
    Monique E. L'Italien, P.A.
    3940 10th Ave N Ste 3
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 855-7240
    Romano Law Group PA
    1005 Lake Ave
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 533-6700
    Wrongful Death Attorneys,  Accident & Property Damage Attorneys,  Automobile Accident Attorneys,  Co
    JN Paralegal Services.
    3923 Lake Worth Rd Suite 110
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 429-6665
    Paralegals, Legal Document Assistance
    FLA Search Co
    3959 Lake Worth Rd Ste D
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 969-6594
    Attorneys Referral & Information Service, Attorneys Support & Service Bureaus, Legal Service Plans
    Weiss Jan
    7810 S Dixie Hwy
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 582-6401
    Attorneys
    Larry E. Bray, P.A.
    6415 Lake Worth Road #209
    Lake Worth, FL 33463
    (561) 296-5291
    Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning Attorneys, Real Estate Attorneys, Collection Law Attorneys, Probate
    Hands Together-Palm Beaches
    25 S H St
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 533-5280
    Immigration Law Attorneys, Immigration & Naturalization Consultants, Attorneys
    Tinsley Eric J
    2000 N Dixie Hwy Ste 4
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 582-5001
    Civil Litigation & Trial Law Attorneys, Attorneys, General Practice Attorneys
    Sorgini & Sorgini PA
    300 N Federal Hwy
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 585-5000
    Attorneys, Real Estate Attorneys, Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning Attorneys
    Stafford Shane L P A
    2290 10th Ave N # 302
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 540-4533
    Attorneys Referral & Information Service, Attorneys, Civil Litigation & Trial Law Attorneys
    Williams Charles
    917 N Dixie Hwy
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 582-4080
    Attorneys, Legal Service Plans, Corporation & Partnership Law Attorneys, Employee Benefits & Worker
    Drucker Law Offices
    8461 Lake Worth Rd Ste 437
    Lake Worth, FL 33467
    (561) 967-3840
    Personal Injury Law Attorneys, Attorneys
    Legal Trtanscription
    4295 Berkshire Wharf Dr
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 429-3817
    Paralegals
    Altman & Greer
    1611 N Federal Hwy
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 588-3311
    Attorneys, Family Law Attorneys, Criminal Law Attorneys
    Deitsch & Wright, P.A.
    8461 Lake Worth Rd.
    Lake Worth, FL 33467
    (855) 707-3279
    Personal Injury Law Attorneys, Insurance Attorneys
    Springer Robert H
    2290 10th Ave N
    Lake Worth, FL 33461
    (561) 432-3232
    Attorneys,  Real Estate Attorneys,  Civil Litigation & Trial Law Attorneys,  Bankruptcy Law Attorney
    Molina Immigration Specialist
    2000 N Dixie Hwy Ste 2
    Lake Worth, FL 33460
    (561) 585-2905
    Immigration Law Attorneys, Immigration & Naturalization Consultants, Attorneys
    12Law.com   |  NASHVILLE, TN USA   |  CONTACT US