Distributing The Trust Assets
How should your Trust distributions be structured for beneficiaries?
When setting up a trust, you may be concerned about how to structure trust distributions for your beneficiaries after you (the grantors) are no longer living. In other words, what is the appropriate age to distribute trust assets to a particular beneficiary? Should the distributions be split up so they don’t get everything at once? If they do split up distributions, what ages should such distributions take place and in what percentages? What if a beneficiary needs the money earlier than anticipated?
The Trustee and Executor
What is a trustee?
A trustee is a person or entity (such as a bank) that is put in charge of certain responsibilities such as: securing the assets of the trust, engaging with a financial advisor or investment firm (or making investment decisions themselves depending on the complexity of the trust assets and the trustee’s personal experience), hiring an attorney to navigate trust compliance, hiring an accountant to prepare state and federal income tax returns for the trust, make distributions from the trust for the payments of bills and expenses, and make a final division of trust and distributions to children once they reach a given age (as instructed in the trust document).