Trusts can offer significant benefits to your estate plan. While a last will and testament designates distribution of your estate to heirs, trusts offer powerful advantages of probate avoidance, privacy and management for the benefit of yourself during life and your beneficiaries.
A highly qualified New York City Trust Lawyer at Pierro, Connor & Strauss provides individualized attention to ensure that a client’s chosen trust provides the maximum protection and peace of mind.
We serve clients in the New York City region including Manhattan, Staten Island, Queens, the Bronx, Brooklyn, as well as Westchester and Long Island, guiding clients through the different types of trusts to help determine which option is right for your estate plan. With over 350 years of combined experience, our attorneys handle all trust matters, from creation to administration, and if necessary, litigation.
Benefits of Adding a Living Trust to Your Estate Plan
A central tenet of trust planning is ensuring that you and your loved ones avoid probate, which is accomplished by the creation of a trust. In the world of estate planning, trusts are the most powerful weapon in the arsenal, providing asset protection, tax reduction, probate avoidance and many other uses. While Trusts can sometimes have more upfront costs over a traditional Will, there are many benefits and cost savings to consider.
For most clients, trusts are a valuable addition to the Core Four, which include a will, power of attorney, health care proxy and disposition of remains appointment.
A Trust is a legal entity under which three roles are created. First, you, as Grantor, or Creator of the Trust, dictate the terms of the Trust and decide what to put in it. Second, an individual you select, known as the Trustee, holds and manages property under the terms of the agreement. Third, you name the beneficiaries of the trust, which could include yourself, family members, charities or anyone else you want to benefit. Thus, a Trust is a legal arrangement through which you give property to your Trustee to manage and use for the benefit of whomever you name.