Asset planning and estate planning go hand-in-hand by protecting your assets during your lifetime and ensuring that those assets go to those you wish to benefit when you pass away. You can do so by creating an effective estate plan that utilizes a number of different techniques to maximize asset protection. Knowing which type of trust your estate will require is an integral part of planning for the future.
Notably, an increasingly popular tool to reduce asset exposure to creditors, lawsuits, ex-spouses, and other potential asset predators is something called a “
domestic asset protection trust,” or DAPT. Traditionally, trusts were not very useful in keeping assets away from creditors. If you created trust from your assets and for your own benefit, creditors would still be able to reach those assets. Yet, about two decades ago, certain states started to change their laws on trusts so that people could create trusts that could not be reached by future creditors. A domestic asset protection trust is a “self-settled” trust (a form of an irrevocable trust), which means that there is an independent trustee who controls the trust and is responsible for distributing the trust asset to its beneficiaries.
However, most estate planning professionals will agree that there is no one “silver bullet” strategy that will guarantee absolute protection in all circumstances. We urge you to establish asset planning and estate planning in advance. It’s always easier when you secure your planning well before they are necessary. By getting a head start on substantial changes in your life, you will find that these matters are much easier to handle when the time comes that they become necessary. Plus, planning now will make things much easier on both you and your loved ones when the time comes to discuss asset planning and estate planning. So don’t wait until there’s a problem to tackle your planning needs.