tlb wrote:cthia wrote:Even if it is a tax shelter on Beowulf, you can never know if it will continue to be so. But trust funds ARE a thing. However, the bottom line would be the same for Alison because even trust funds are not paid out until the time of death. That's why they are called "Trusts."
I've known parents to give percentages of the trust at various times before death, but that amount is penalized for early dispersal. Besides, trust funds are simply tax-sheltered inheritances anyway.
The highlighted statement is incorrect in the general case. There are all sorts of things that can be done with trusts, but irrevocable trusts cease being the property of the grantor at the time they are created.
True. Irrevocable trusts are no longer the property of the parent/grantor. That only means two significant things.
1. The parent cannot change his/her mind because they don't like your lifestyle or the person you marry. Nor can they renegotiate the trust because they are now broke.
2. The main reason they are even considered is to protect the assets from the government, or from any lawsuits or from any other unforeseen stormy weather.
It does not mean the assets become directly the property of the recipients. It becomes the assets of the Trust. IOW, the trust receives the money, and not the child. Or why go to the trouble of setting up the Trust. Simply write the child a check. (Barring the possibility of the mentally incompetent or the underaged.) They are only paid out in time of death. If not, a child can burn through their inheritance before the parents are dead. That is not the spirit of a "Trust that you'll have money when we're gone."
There are lots of things that can be done with Trusts, true. But the intention is to cheat the government, not cheat the spirit of the Trust or the parent or child.
Now, you can set up a trust to be paid out at any age that you think the child will be responsible. Just be sure of it, or you may have to set up another. It's messy.
In the HV, I can't see them being paid out too early when lifespans are so long.