Funding Your Living Trust: What to Include and Why It Matters
Creating a living trust is a foundational step in a well-designed estate plan, but its effectiveness depends on what happens next. A trust that is never properly funded can leave families facing probate, unnecessary taxes, and loss of control—precisely the outcomes most people seek to avoid.
What “Funding” a Living Trust Really Means
Funding a living trust involves transferring ownership of assets from your individual name into the name of your trust or coordinating beneficiary designations so assets pass according to the trust’s terms. A pour-over will typically acts as a safety net, directing any forgotten assets into the trust at death, but those assets may still pass through probate first. Proper funding during life is what allows a trust to function smoothly. Example: John and Susan sign a trust but never retitle their residence. When John dies, Susan learns the home must go through probate because title was never transferred. A simple deed prepared during their lifetime would have avoided that burden entirely.
Assets Commonly Placed in a Trust
For most Arizona families, the following assets are commonly transferred into a trust:
- Real property (primary residence, vacation properties, vacant land)
- Bank accounts
- Non-retirement investment accounts
- Business interests (when appropriate)
- Untitled personal property
When it comes to rental or commercial property, these should be titled in the name of a business entity (LLC, Corporation, etc.) therefore, placing these into the trust involves linking the business to the trust rather than the property itself.
Naming a Trust as Beneficiary
Naming a trust as a beneficiary, rather than an individual, can provide maximum control over how and when assets are distributed. This approach is often used when beneficiaries are young, financially inexperienced, or in professions with liability exposure. This can include qualified and non-qualified investments. Often, the trust is the secondary/contingent beneficiary, while another loved one is the primary.
Warning: Minors, disabled persons, or any beneficiary that may need protection for any reason should NOT be named directly as beneficiaries. In this case, the Trust should be the beneficiary, and the Trust says who inherits and how they inherit.
Life Insurance and Irrevocable Trusts
Life insurance planning deserves special attention. Large estates ($15 Million per person is the exemption limit) may benefit from an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT), which removes the value of life insurance from the taxable estate. Existing policies transferred into an ILIT are subject to a three-year rule for estate tax inclusion, while new policies purchased directly by the trust avoid that issue altogether. Because mistakes here can be costly, professional guidance is essential.
Community Property Considerations
Arizona’s community property rules can be preserved inside a living trust. In fact, properly retitling assets as community property within the trust may allow for a full step-up in basis at the first spouse’s death, potentially reducing capital gains taxes if assets are later sold. Property Agreements & Schedules are powerful tools in ensuring the correct characterization of your assets, and tax consequences at death.
A living trust is only as effective as its funding. Periodic reviews—especially after acquiring property, changing beneficiaries, or experiencing family changes—ensure your plan remains aligned with your goals so that you can…leave a legacy, not a burden!


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