How to Fund a Living Trust Correctly (Brooklyn Guide)

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Signing a revocable living trust is only half the job. A trust controls only the assets actually transferred into it. An unfunded trust is just expensive paper, and your estate still lands in Kings County Surrogate’s Court. Here is a practical Brooklyn checklist for funding it correctly.

Why funding matters

A revocable living trust (EPTL Article 7) avoids probate only for the assets titled in the trust’s name. Anything left in your individual name at death passes outside the trust and may require probate. Note that a revocable trust avoids probate but does not save estate tax, so funding is about probate avoidance and control, not tax cuts.

Step 1: Inventory everything

List every asset: bank and brokerage accounts, your Brooklyn home or co-op, business interests, valuable personal property, and life insurance. You cannot fund what you have not catalogued. Note how each asset is currently titled.

Step 2: Retitle real estate

For a house or condo in Brooklyn, fund the trust by executing and recording a new deed transferring the property into the trust’s name. Co-ops are different: they are shares in a corporation, not real property, so transferring a co-op into a trust usually requires board approval and the cooperative’s cooperation. Build in time for this.

Step 3: Move bank and brokerage accounts

Retitle accounts into the name of the trust, or open new accounts in the trust’s name. Each institution has its own paperwork and may want a certification of trust. Keep operating cash you need day to day accessible.

Step 4: Handle retirement accounts carefully

Do not retitle IRAs or 401(k)s into the trust during your lifetime; doing so can trigger immediate income tax. Instead, coordinate the beneficiary designation, sometimes naming the trust as beneficiary, only with attorney guidance, because the tax rules are intricate.

Step 5: Coordinate life insurance and beneficiaries

Update beneficiary designations so they align with your overall plan. Designations override your trust and will, so a stale designation can defeat the whole structure.

Step 6: Use a pour-over will as a safety net

A pour-over will directs any asset you forgot to fund into the trust at death. It is a backstop, not a substitute for funding, because assets caught by the pour-over may still pass through Surrogate’s Court (SCPA) before reaching the trust.

Step 7: Keep funding ongoing

When you buy a new Brooklyn property, open a new account, or acquire significant assets, title them in the trust from the start. Funding is not a one-time event.

Common funding mistakes

  • Signing the trust but never transferring a single asset.
  • Forgetting the co-op board approval step.
  • Retitling retirement accounts and triggering tax.
  • Leaving beneficiary designations out of sync with the trust.

Consult a New York attorney

Trust funding involves deeds, tax rules, and institution-specific paperwork that are easy to get wrong. Work with a licensed New York estate planning attorney serving Brooklyn to fund your trust properly. This article is general information, not legal advice.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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