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		Creating a trust is one of the smartest moves you can make in your estate plan. It helps your loved ones avoid probate, keeps your affairs private, and gives you control over how your assets are distributed.
But here’s the mistake too many people make: they stop after signing the trust documents. If you don’t transfer certain assets into the trust and update beneficiary designations on others, it’s like building a safe and never putting anything inside. The trust won’t actually work the way you intended.
Funding a trust means transferring ownership of certain assets from your name into the name of the trust. You, as the grantor, have created a legal entity, and it needs to own or be named as the beneficiary of the assets you want it to manage and eventually distribute. This process often includes retitling real estate and bank accounts, as well as updating beneficiary designations on assets like life insurance policies and retirement accounts.
For example, instead of your home title reading “John and Mary Smith,” it should read “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the Smith Family Trust dated 11-04-2025.” The same concept applies to other assets—your bank accounts, real estate, and sometimes even vehicles.
Without that transfer, the trust is empty. Any assets still in your personal name at death may have to go through probate, the very process you were trying to avoid.
Most people create a trust to make life easier for their loved ones—but an unfunded or partially funded trust does the opposite. Here’s why funding matters so much:
Without funding, your estate plan can unravel. Your loved ones might face months of delays, extra court costs, and unnecessary stress—all because one crucial step was skipped.
Every estate plan is unique, but most trusts are funded with a mix of real estate, financial accounts, and personal property. The goal is to make sure each asset is either owned by the trust or properly coordinated with it through beneficiary designations. Here’s how common assets are handled:
The key is coordination and accuracy. If you want an asset governed by your trust’s terms, make sure it’s either owned by or payable to the trust—or has the proper beneficiary designations in place to work alongside it.
Creating a trust is one of the best ways to plan your estate and make things easier for your family—but it only works properly if you fund it. Without that step, your estate plan is incomplete and probate could still be waiting around the corner.
At Legacy Law Group, we guide you through every stage of the estate planning process, from drafting your documents to helping you understand how to properly fund your trust. Our attorneys provide clear instructions and support so your plan works as intended.
Don’t leave your trust empty. Schedule a consultation with Legacy Law Group today to make sure your estate plan truly works for you and your family.
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