A trust is an arrangement which can form part of your will and can provide further protection of the assets for your loved ones. Wills containing trusts are known as trust wills. We at all times would advise you to consider the benefits of incorporating a trust into your will. They most frequently occur in the following situations:
We create tailor-made trusts to help you:
If you have a property and wish to ensure its value is best protected for future generations, a property trust will give you more confidence.
A property trust will can provide a trust in your will that looks after your property or your share of it. You would appoint trustees to manage the trust, but the terms of the trust enable you to allow someone-ordinarily either a spouse or civil partner-the right to benefit from the trust during their lifetime.
This means they could either live in the property that’s contained in the trust or receive a rental income from it. If, on the other hand, the trust contains cash because the property in the trust has been sold, then they have a right to receive the income generated from the trust during their lifetime.
A property trust will suits married/civil partnership couples. You will, however be able to make a discretionary trust if you are not married.
A flexible life interest trust will is much like a property trust will, except that this type allows you to put the entirety or only a portion of your estate into the will trust, instead of just your house.
A flexible life interest trust will may be able to help you if you have significant assets or investments in addition to property and would like to protect their value for future generations.
A life interest trust allows someone to have the benefit of a life interest in your property or any other assets, yet not necessarily those assets leaving your estate. For example, if in your will you have created a life interest trust and your house has been placed into this, then the holder of the life interest could remain in the property for the rest of their life but upon his death, it would then be distributed according to the terms of your will.
A life interest trust can be a good method of providing for a loved one during his or her lifetime while preserving the value of your assets for your future generations.
A flexible life interest trust will guarantees who benefits from cash assets and investments as well as property if your surviving spouse or civil partner:
This type of will also enables any appointee to receive the benefit of any income produced by your investments in the event of your death, whilst at the same time this safeguards the capital value for future generations.
Someone may benefit from a flexible life interest trust will if he or she holds cash assets and investments in their sole name and:
A discretionary trust will further allow you to appoint trustees to manage inheritance on behalf of vulnerable loved ones that need help.
You can use a discretionary trust will to place your estate or a part of it into a trust created in your will and managed by whomever you name as trustees. Then, you name the potential beneficiaries of the trust and leave it to your trustees’ discretion as to which of the potential beneficiaries actually gets a benefit from the trust, when and how.
Anybody who wishes to leave an inheritance to: