You’ve probably heard that trusts help families avoid probate court and protect assets for the people you love. Maybe you’ve even talked to a lawyer who mentioned including a trust in your will. It sounds like a good solution, but here’s what most people don’t realize: a trust created in your will works very differently from a living trust you create today, and the difference will have a major impact on your loved ones when you die.

Both options use the word “trust,” which makes them sound similar. But the experience your family will have after your death depends entirely on which type you choose. More importantly, these different approaches serve different goals, and understanding what you’re actually trying to accomplish is the most critical part of making the right choice.

In this two-part series, I’ll help you understand what each type of trust actually does and how to choose the approach that matches what matters most to you and your loved ones. Here in Part 1, let’s dive into what happens when you create a trust in your will and help you evaluate what you’re really trying to achieve. 

What Happens When You Create a Trust in Your Will

A trust created in your will, called a testamentary trust, only comes into existence after you die, and after your executor has navigated a court process to establish the trust. Your will might say something like “upon my death, I direct that my assets be held in trust for my children until they reach age 25.” This provision offers some protection by controlling when your children receive their inheritance. But it doesn’t keep your family out of court.

All wills must go through probate court. Therefore, when you die with a will containing trust provisions, your loved ones must go through probate before the trust can be created. This process typically takes months, sometimes years. While your loved ones wait for the process to unfold, your assets are basically frozen, potentially putting your loved ones in an unstable financial position. 

Here’s what the probate process looks like: 

  • Your family must first locate your original will and file it with the probate court. 
  • The court then officially appoints your named executor, who must notify all potential heirs and creditors of your death. 
  • Your executor must gather all your assets, have them appraised, pay your debts and taxes, and prepare detailed accounting reports for the court. 
  • Only after the court reviews and approves everything can your assets be distributed into the newly created trust, which must be approved by the judge.

Your family may also face significant costs. Probate involves court filing fees, legal fees, appraisal costs, and sometimes accounting fees. These expenses come directly out of your estate, reducing what’s left for your loved ones. In many states, attorney fees and executor fees are calculated as a percentage of your estate’s value. And because probate is a public court process, anyone can access information about what you owned and who you left it to.

Here’s what really matters: you’re essentially doing double the work to achieve the same outcome you could have accomplished with a living trust, but with added expense, a longer timeline, and far greater possibility for family conflict. You’re creating a trust that provides the same protections a living trust offers, but you’re forcing your family to go through an entire court process first. And that’s only part of the problem. Because a will only takes effect when you die, it also leaves a critical gap in protection while you’re still alive.

What a Will Can’t Do While You’re Still Alive

A will only takes effect when you die, which means it does nothing to protect you if you become incapacitated first. Most people rely on a Power of Attorney, or “POA,” to authorize someone to manage their finances if they’re unable to do so. But here’s the catch: a POA automatically ends the moment you die.

That creates a dangerous gap. The second you pass, your POA’s authority disappears — but your executor has no power either until the probate court officially appoints them. Accounts get frozen, bills go unpaid, and your family can’t touch a thing while they wait. A living trust eliminates this gap entirely. Because it exists right now, your successor trustee has uninterrupted authority to manage your assets through incapacity and seamlessly at your death — no court approval required, no delay, no financial limbo for your family.

All of this brings us to the most important question: what are you actually trying to accomplish? The gaps we’ve just covered – probate delays, frozen accounts, the POA cliff – aren’t inevitable. They’re the result of choosing a planning tool without first understanding your real goals.

How We Help You Identify What Matters Most

At August Law, we don’t focus on the documents themselves because we believe documents are the byproduct of good planning. Planning starts with getting clear on what matters most, so our comprehensive planning process starts with education and understanding during a Life & Legacy Planning Session. During your session, you’ll get clear about what would actually happen to your family when you die or if you become incapacitated. We’ll walk through the real costs, the real timeline, and the real experience your loved ones will face. Then we’ll identify your true priorities so you can make an informed decision and create the right plan for you.

Schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call to get started.

This article is a service of August Law, a Personal Family Lawyer® Firm. We don’t just draft documents; we ensure you make informed and empowered decisions about life and death, for yourself and the people you love. That’s why we offer a Life & Legacy Planning™ Session, during which you will get more financially organized than you’ve ever been before and make all the best choices for the people you love. 

The content is sourced from Personal Family Lawyer® for use by Personal Family Lawyer® firms, a source believed to be providing accurate information. This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

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