A revocable living trust is the most powerful tool for avoiding probate, protecting privacy, and ensuring your assets pass seamlessly to your heirs.
Once you transfer assets to an irrevocable trust, you give up control — but you gain powerful protection from creditors, estate taxes, and lawsuits.
A Grantor Retained Annuity Trust is one of the most powerful estate planning tools for transferring appreciation to heirs with minimal gift tax. Here is how it works, when it makes sense, and what the risks are.
A dynasty trust can hold assets for multiple generations — in some states, indefinitely — without triggering estate or generation-skipping taxes at each transfer. Here is how it works and why it is one of the most powerful tools in generational wealth planning.
A Spousal Lifetime Access Trust allows married couples to use their current estate tax exemption while maintaining indirect access to the assets through the beneficiary spouse. With the 2026 exemption sunset approaching, SLATs are the most widely used planning strategy for married couples.
Most people know they need a trust — but they do not know which kind. The difference between revocable and irrevocable trusts is not just legal technicality — it determines whether your assets are protected from estate taxes, creditors, and Medicaid.