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A trust is a right in property held by one person for the benefit of another. Trusts serve a
variety of purposes and may take a number of different forms. A trust may be created to
benefit a family member, a charity, or even a pet. Since trusts allow an individual to
distribute his or her assets to others while minimizing estate, income, and gift taxes,
trusts have become an essential component of estate planning. In the absence of
nationally uniform trust legislation, individual states have developed their own laws to
govern the establishment and maintenance of trusts. The Uniform Probate Code (UPC),
which sets forth provisions relating to both wills and trusts, has been adopted in whole
by over 30 percent of the states.
The Settlor. The settlor, also known as the grantor or trustor, is the person who
creates the trust and transfers trust property.
Trust Property. Any type of property, real or personal, tangible or intangible,
may serve as trust property.
The Trustee. A trustee maintains the trust property and makes distributions to
the beneficiary according to the terms of the trust. A trustee may be a person or a
legal entity. The trustee owes a fiduciary duty to the beneficiary, which includes
protecting trust property, investing prudently, and making proper distributions.
The Beneficiary. The beneficiary to a trust is the person who benefits from the
trust property. A beneficiary may be a single person, a group of people, an
organization, or a pet. The beneficiary need not be in existence at the time the
trust is created.
Trust Purpose. A trust must have a valid purpose. A valid purpose is defined as
any legal purpose. Trusts are most commonly created to provide for support,
education, asset protection, tax planning or to contribute to a charity.
Living Trusts. A living trust, or inter vivos trust, is created for the benefit of
another during the settlor's life.
Testamentary Trusts. Testamentary trusts are created by a settlor's will. A
settlor's property is therefore transferred into the trust when the settlor dies.
Revocable Trusts. A revocable trust allows the settlor to retain sole control of
the trust. While the settlor does not receive any tax benefits from a revocable
trust, the settlor can withdraw funds from the trust, or alter or cancel the trust at
any time.
Irrevocable Trusts. The trustee of an irrevocable trust is given sole control over
the trust property. Typically, the trust will not come to an end until the trust
purpose is fulfilled. The trust may be altered or revoked before this time only with
the consent of the trustee and all beneficiaries.
Fixed Trusts. Beneficiaries to a fixed trust receive trust property on a specific
schedule set forth by the settlor. The trustee of a fixed trust has little or no
discretion to distribute trust property.
Discretionary Trusts. A discretionary trust gives the trustee the power to
choose how and when, if at all, to distribute trust property to beneficiaries. A
discretionary trust may provide significant tax benefits to beneficiaries, since no
beneficiary has an interest in trust assets until they are distributed.