Plain-English trust setup

What kind of trust do you want to set up?

Choose a trust type below. Each card explains what it is, what it is usually used for, pros and cons, a real-life example, and how hard it is to complete.

Built for beginners

You do not need to know what Grantor, Trustee, Beneficiary, Distribution, Funding, or Schedule A means. The tool explains those terms as you go and shows examples directly inside the fields.

Beginner Friendly

Revocable Living Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: The everyday family trust you can usually change while you are alive.

Best used for: Avoiding probate, organizing family inheritance, incapacity planning, and keeping things easier for your family.

Example: Ted and Sarah want their house, bank accounts, tools, and family keepsakes to pass to their children without making the family figure everything out in court.

Pros
  • Flexible and changeable
  • Common family planning tool
  • Can help avoid probate when funded
  • Keeps instructions organized
Cons
  • Must be funded to work well
  • Usually does not protect assets from your own creditors
  • May still need attorney review
Simple

Pet Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: A care plan and money set aside for your animals if something happens to you.

Best used for: Pets, livestock, horses, service animals, or animals needing ongoing care.

Example: You want your dog, two cats, and horse cared for by a trusted person, with money set aside for food, vet bills, boarding, and emergency care.

Pros
  • Simple and practical
  • Gives clear care instructions
  • Names caregiver and backup caregiver
Cons
  • Requires reliable caregiver
  • Needs clear leftover-money instructions
  • State rules may vary
Moderate

Spendthrift Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: A trust that protects a beneficiary from receiving too much too fast or being pressured by others.

Best used for: Young beneficiaries, financially vulnerable beneficiaries, addiction concerns, creditor pressure, or family conflict.

Example: You love your son, but he is terrible with money. Instead of handing him everything at once, the trustee can pay for rent, school, medical needs, or monthly support.

Pros
  • Controls timing of distributions
  • Gives trustee oversight
  • Can protect inheritance from bad decisions
Cons
  • Needs careful wording
  • Trustee may face family pressure
  • Beneficiary has less control
Attorney Review

Special Needs Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: A trust designed to support someone with a disability without accidentally disrupting benefits.

Best used for: A beneficiary who receives or may receive SSI, Medicaid, housing help, or other public benefits.

Example: Your daughter receives Medicaid and SSI. You want money available for quality-of-life support without accidentally giving her direct assets that could cause a benefit problem.

Pros
  • Supports a vulnerable beneficiary
  • Can preserve benefit planning when correctly drafted
  • Creates long-term care instructions
Cons
  • Needs attorney review
  • Benefit rules are strict
  • Trustee must understand limits
Attorney Review

Irrevocable Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: A stronger lockbox where you usually give up control after assets go in.

Best used for: Advanced asset protection, tax planning, Medicaid planning, or long-term wealth transfer.

Example: A family wants to move certain assets outside direct personal ownership for a specific legal or tax planning reason.

Pros
  • Can be powerful when used correctly
  • May help with protection or tax goals
  • Creates stronger separation from personal ownership
Cons
  • Hard to change
  • Mistakes can be expensive
  • Attorney and tax review strongly recommended
Attorney Review

Asset Protection Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: A trust designed to protect assets from certain future risks when planned correctly and early.

Best used for: Business owners, professionals, high-liability situations, or long-term wealth preservation.

Example: A business owner wants to plan ahead before problems arise, not after a lawsuit or claim already exists.

Pros
  • Can separate assets from direct exposure
  • Useful for risk planning
  • Can support long-term family wealth planning
Cons
  • Very state-specific
  • Can fail if done after a known claim
  • Requires attorney review
Attorney Review

Charitable Trust

In Leaman/Layman terms: A trust that supports a charity or cause, sometimes alongside family planning.

Best used for: Legacy giving, charitable goals, tax-aware planning, or mission-based estate planning.

Example: You want part of your estate to support veterans, a church, animal rescue, or another cause after you pass.

Pros
  • Supports a mission
  • Can create a legacy
  • May have tax planning benefits
Cons
  • Needs careful charity details
  • Tax review recommended
  • More complex than a basic family trust